Gulf News

How a virus upended lives of 20m

PANDEMIC CHANGED THE WORKSPACES OF THE AFFLUENT AND HIT THE POOR HARD IN MUMBAI

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When the bubonic plague arrived on ships in 1896, death and fear emptied half of Mumbai. Ensuing labour shortages devastated the city’s cotton mills, the mainstay of the contempora­ry economy.

Although the coronaviru­s pandemic’s toll has been much lower, there are grim parallels. Almost a million workers who built Mumbai’s skyline — from the Trump Tower to skyscraper­s owned by global firms such as Blackstone Group LP on erstwhile mill land — have fled to their native villages, short of money after a stringent government lockdown brought the economy to a standstill.

A plague-era law is being used to draft doctors into the coronaviru­s fight, and calls are increasing to decongest infection hotspots.

A megapolis of about 20 million, few cities face the reckoning around labour and life that Mumbai must now contend with.

Here, six Mumbaikars, as the city’s residents are known, share how the virus has changed their lives and workspaces.

The Union Leader: J. R. Bhosale, 79

Bhosale has seen a lot during his six decades with Mumbai’s railways. A labour strike in 1974 — the world’s largest recorded industrial action — suspended services for 20 days and terrorist bombs in 2006 kept trains quiet for 24 hours. Yet, under the lockdown, passenger services have been halted for more than two months. Authoritie­s are concerned about the risk of contagion because on a typical day trains run so crowded that latecomers would hang out of doorways.

“It is impossible to maintain safe distance,” says Bhosale, general secretary of the Western Railway Employees Union.

The Banker: Vincent Valladares, 48

Valladares heads commercial banking at RBL Bank Ltd. Authoritie­s termed financial services as “essential” amid the lockdown, so Valladares drives to office that stands on former mill land in Mumbai. Valladares and his colleagues have been bombarded by a series of policy changes from the Reserve Bank of India and the government in recent weeks. Evolving instructio­ns — from how to sanitise branches to how much capital to retain — takes up most of their time and there’s little new business. For now, focus is on figuring out how clients will emerge from the crisis, and which parts of the loanbook could develop into default hotspots.

The Food Delivery Guy: Nitin Sawant, 32

Sawant is one of Mumbai’s dabbawalla­s, the city’s renowned lunch-box service. They’ve delivered homecooked meals to officegoer­s since 1890, and are so famous for reliabilit­y that Harvard professors have sought to understand their mastery of logistics. Now most of the 5,000-strong force has returned to their villages, says Sawant, who is also secretary at the Mumbai Dabbawala Associatio­n. His colleagues have decided they won’t work till Diwali because their business involves contact with dozens of people, increasing the risk of contagion to themselves and others. “Now they will be scared. Many may not resume the tiffin service fearing risk of infection.”

The Maid: Kalima Mujawar, 29

Mujawar washes dishes and cleans floors in four homes in Worli, close to the headquarte­rs of several banks and financial institutio­ns. Only one household continued to pay her after the lockdown prevented her from going to work. “Even after the lockdown lifts it doesn’t seem like people will want maids to visit their houses for the rest of the year,” Mujawar says. She’s most concerned about the interrupti­on in her children’s education. Mujawar is one of millions of people who lost their jobs in recent months, threatenin­g to widen what was already a vast disparity between lifestyles in the city.

The Stock Broker: Anita Gandhi, 56

Gandhi, a whole time director at Arihant Capital Markets, is seeing technology being put to another use. About 1.2 million new stock-trading accounts were opened with the Central Depository Services (India) Ltd. in March and April, up from a combined 900,000 in the first two months of the year. India’s benchmark index, which gave up nearly 40 per cent of its value in a matter of weeks when the virus began spreading, has made up some ground as the country begins dismantlin­g the lockdown. “Those who are tech savvy realised that this is another way money can be made,” says Gandhi. “They started to see investing in the market as a good alternate income stream.”

The Actor: Alistar Bennis, 24

Bennis, a theatre and screen actor, is also scouting for alternate opportunit­ies. Bollywood — as Mumbai’s film industry is called — came to a virtual standstill and though authoritie­s have allowed some work to resume with strict restrictio­ns, producers are moving film-shoots to less infected parts of the country. But Bennis tries to stay optimistic. “The spirit of Mumbai seems very dead if you wander the streets at night,” he says. “People in business are frowning, shops are closing, but if you take a step and talk to people, they will say: ‘I know a guy, who knows a guy, who will get your job done.’”

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