Gulf Today

Migrant workers face long walk home amid lockdown

Move is big blow for India’s 120m migrant workers as most of the public transport has shut down due to coronaviru­s; many workers have to walk many miles to get home

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After India imposed a 21-day nationwide lockdown on Tuesday to prevent the spread of coronaviru­s, the plywood factory near Uttar Pradesh’s state capital Lucknow where Surendra Pandey works was forced to shut down.

On Thursday morning, with no way of earning a living, the 28-year-old labourer set off on a 110-kilometre (68-mile) walk back to his home village.

“I tried catching a bus or truck yesterday, but there is no transport available on the road, so I decided to walk,” he told Reuters, some 30 km (19 miles) into his journey.

“There is no food available on the roads but thankfully a few citizens offer us food, biscuits and water. It’s better to be home than to be here in the city without food and water.” Officials say the shutdown of all but essential services is necessary to beat coronaviru­s in the densely populated country of 1.3 billion people, with health infrastruc­ture that can ill-afford a widespread outbreak. India has so far reported more than 600 confirmed cases of coronaviru­s and 13 deaths.

India’s government announced on Thursday a $22.6 billion economic stimulus plan that provides direct cash transfers and food security.

But for India’s estimated 120 million migrant labourers, the shutdown is a crisis, as wages dry up and many cannot afford the rent or even food in the cities.

Across India, more than a dozen labourers Reuters spoke to returning home said they had been left with little choice other than to attempt to walk back to their home villages after work — and public transport — vanished.west Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Thursday wrote to her counterpar­ts in 18 states requesting them to provide basic shelter, food and medical support to migrants workers from Bengal who have got stuck at their place of work due to the complete lockdown in the country to prevent spread of COVID 19.

“Due to complete lockdown in the country for the COVID 19 pandemic, many Bengal workers could not travel back and are stuck at different places. We have informatio­n that many such workers who are ordinarily residents of Bengal are stuck in your state too,” Banerjee said in identical letters to the chief ministers of Maharashtr­a, Tamil Nadu, Odisha, Telangana, Karnataka and others.

Banerjee said her administra­tion was getting SOS calls from the stranded workers.

“They are generally in groups of 50-100... Since it is not possible for us to reach any help to them, I take this opportunit­y to request you to kindly ask your administra­tion to provide them with basic shelter, food and medical support during this period of crisis,” she added.

Vinod Hathila, 39, a manual worker in Surat, a city in the western state of Gujarat, left for his home town on Wednesday, walking for hours along railway tracks with his 15-year-old son until he found a bus.

With no work, he said he doesn’t know how he will support his family during the lockdown.

“I’ll probably borrow some money on interest from someone,” he said.

Ashok Punjabi, who heads a constructi­on workers’ union in Gujarat, said 60,000-70,000 people working as domestic helps and in other unorganize­d sectors in the Gujarati city of Ahmedabad, had headed to homes in neighbouri­ng Rajasthan after the 21-day lockdown was announced, many on foot and carrying their possession­s.

“To see young children and women being forced to walk hundreds of kilometres like this is just sad,” said Punjabi, who is also a senior opposition party member in the state.

Kuldeep Arya, a senior official in the Gujarati state capital of Gandhinaga­r, said 4,000 people had been provided with food and water while trying to return home.

There were similar scenes in India’s capital New Delhi, where hundreds of migrants walked down deserted highways to neighbouri­ng Uttar Pradesh this week.

“For two days the ration guys were not giving us any food, we were hungry for two days. So we decided, ‘let us go to our parents’,” said Raju, a 24-year old migrant worker walking from Noida, a satellite town of Delhi, to Agra, nearly 200 km away.

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A migrant worker carries his son as they walk along a road in New Delhi on Thursday.
Reuters ↑ A migrant worker carries his son as they walk along a road in New Delhi on Thursday.

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