Oman Daily Observer

Mumbai becoming mean?

- RINA CHANDRAN

India’s western Maharashtr­a state has passed a law requiring street hawkers to have lived in the state for 15 years before they can apply for a licence, in a move vendors say unfairly targets poor migrants. Officials in Maharashtr­a’s capital Mumbai this week passed the law, which also lists conditions for surveying vendors and demarcatin­g hawking zones. Workers’ organisati­ons say many hawkers, who have migrated from rural areas to Mumbai to seek work and escape poverty, cannot afford property in Mumbai, India’s financial and commercial capital.

“Many hawkers have been here for generation­s, yet do not own homes and do not have domicile certificat­es.

This is the state’s way of pushing out these migrant workers without explicitly asking them to leave,” said Salma Sheikh of the Azad Hawkers’ Union. She said Mumbai’s hawkers will protest the new policy and challenge the domicile condition in court.

Arbind Singh, coordinato­r for the National Associatio­n of Street Vendors of India lobbying group, said the new law will only divide the hawkers and further alienate migrants.

“It’s unconstitu­tional for the state to insist on a 15-year domicile. As per the constituti­on, anyone can move anywhere within the country for their livelihood,” he said.

“Do they ask doctors or lawyers or film actors to prove they have lived in the state for 15 years before letting them work? This is clearly discrimina­tory and targets poor migrant workers,” he said.

Vendors selling everything from snacks and tea to toys, clothes and shoes are a common sight in India’s cities.

They spread their wares on pavements, outside schools and temples, and carry them in baskets on trains and at traffic lights.

Only about 14,000 hawkers in Mumbai are licensed, while the number unlicensed is estimated at about 150,000.

Unlicensed hawkers often have to pay policemen bribes to continue selling, and must flee eviction drives by city officials.

Municipal official Pallavi Darade said the policy would be applicable for future licences, including 95,000 pending applicatio­ns.

After years of lobbying by activists, India passed the Street Vendors Act in 2014, which protects vendors from being arbitraril­y evicted or relocated from their spots. States were required to pass a law adopting the national policy, but few have done so.

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