Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Caught at Ghazipur, home is a step too far

MIGRANTS Hundreds arrived at Delhi’s border with UP in Ghazipur, in the hope of crossing over or catching buses, only to be turned away

- Fareeha Iftikhar fareeha.iftikhar@htdigital.in

nNEW DELHI: “I want to go back home. My husband has died there, and I need to see him one last time.”

An inconsolab­le Sunita was at Delhi’s border with Uttar Pradesh in Ghazipur in the hope of boarding a bus back home to Sasaram city in Bihar. But the borders were shut, and there were no buses to be found. Sunita had come to visit her sister in the national Capital before the nationwide lockdown came into effect. “Someone please help me get home,” she said, sobbing.

Hundreds of migrants had gathered at the Ghazipur border on Sunday, leading to shouting, chaos and cries as the UP police made sure that no migrant entered Ghaziabad. The nationwide lockdown put in place to curb the spread of Covid-19 was extended till May 31 on Sunday, which was the last day of the third phase of the restrictio­ns.

The UP government had asked the police and administra­tion to ensure no migrant worker travelled on foot or in vehicles, after 24 people were killed in UP’S Auraiya district when the truck they were travelling on met with an accident on Saturday morning. As a result, no buses were forthcomin­g, nor were they allowed to cross over on foot.

This resulted in as migrants tried to enter Ghaziabad, even as the police pushed them back.

A majority of them were from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. Among them was Sushila Devi’s family. Her four sons had managed to cross the border on Saturday night, while she, her husband, a daughter-in-law, and two grandchild­ren had been left behind.

“We started to walk from Narela on Saturday afternoon after someone told us we can get buses to Sitapur in UP, from the Ghazipur border. My sons got to the border before we did, and managed to cross. However, police stopped us when we tried to join them. Now they are stuck just two kilometres away. They were carrying all the money we had. We have been requesting the police to help them get back to Delhi. We are ready to stay wherever we are told. We just want to be together,” she said.

When they weren’t allowed to enter Ghaziabad, angry migrants blocked the Ghazipur main road in the evening for around 20 minutes.

Nitish Tripathi, who worked in a garment factory in the area, was among those who had blocked the arterial road. He said he and his brothers wanted to walk home to Hardoi in Uttar Pradesh.

“We have had no work for the last two months, and have run out of money now. Yesterday, we sold a TV and a table we had in our room to arrange money for the travel. But they are not letting us go home, and asking us to shift to a shelter. Our mother is unwell, and she needs us. We want to go home,” Tripathi said.

Jasmeet Singh, deputy commission­er of police (east), said the migrants had blocked the road after being provoked by “some political leaders” who had gathered many of them at the border with assurances that they would be sent to their home towns.

“There were attempts by some migrants and party leaders to block the Ghazipur Road, but we have convinced them to leave,” Singh said. He said DTC buses would be arranged to send them to their homes in Delhi.

Officers of the Ghaziabad police said they could not let migrants enter as they were on foot, and had orders to that effect. Only those with valid train tickets were to be allowed entry.

Police said nearly 500 migrants had also gathered at the border on Saturday evening.

Sitting under a flyover near the Ghazipur border, Rajesh Kumar Kohli was among six who arrived in Delhi from Kolkata aboard a special train. “We walked from the New Delhi Railway Station to ISBT bus stand to board a bus for Aligarh. At ISBT, someone told us that buses are only available from the borders, so we started walking to Ghazipur last night. We walked for five hours but the police said there were no buses here either. We do not know what to do,” he said.

Meanwhile, chief minister Arvind Kejriwal on Sunday said his government will arrange trains for all migrant workers who want to return home. “We will take full care of the migrants, if they want to live here. In case they want to return to home, we will arrange trains for them. We won’t leave them alone in such a crisis,” he said in a tweet.

Deputy chief minister of Delhi Manish Sisodia said more than 25 trains and a large number of buses have ferried over 35,000 migrant labourers to their home states from Delhi so far.

“Today eight Shramik Special trains will carry around 12,000 migrant labourers to their homes states,” he tweeted.

The Delhi government also directed officials to ensure migrant workers do not walk on roads and railway tracks. “In case they are found in such condition, they should appropriat­ely be counselled, taken to nearby shelters and provided with food, water etc,” the government said in an order issued on Saturday.

 ?? ARVIND YADAV/HT PHOTO ?? Stranded migrant workers gathered under a flyover at the Ghazipur border on Sunday. n
ARVIND YADAV/HT PHOTO Stranded migrant workers gathered under a flyover at the Ghazipur border on Sunday. n
 ?? BURHAAN KINU/HT PHOTO ?? Nitish Tripathi, a stranded migrant worker. n
BURHAAN KINU/HT PHOTO Nitish Tripathi, a stranded migrant worker. n

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India