Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Desperate to get home, many wade through Yamuna

- S Raju s.raju@htlive.com

nMEERUT : Desperate to return home, many migrant workers waded through shallow, waisthigh stretches of the Yamuna from Haryana to Saharanpur in Uttar Pradesh over the past few days to avoid detection and detention at the border checkpoint­s amid the lockdown.

Making the most of the situation, people living on the riverbanks charged each migrant ₹50 to 100 to help them navigate. Not that anyone had a problem.

“Each member of our group paid them. Otherwise, we could have drowned,” said Ranjeet Sahni, a resident of Parjilwa village in Bihar’s Motihari district. He worked in a factory in Jagadhri town of Haryana. His nine months pregnant wife Babita Devi too swam with him. “We risked our life because we had no option.”

The Yamuna demarcates the border between Haryana and Uttar Pradesh. There is no estimate of the number of people who have waded through the river on their way back to homes in Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.

Locals who live on the riverbanks are aware of the shallow stretches of the river and are using this knowledge to make money, Sahni said.

After the lockdown was announced on March 24 , Sahni stayed back in Haryana’s Jagadhri because of his wife’s condition.

But soon his savings dried up. His family lent him ₹9,000 in two instalment­s in the past one month. When that money also started to run out, the couple started walking to their native village on Saturday with 14 others from their village.

They decided to take the river route after coming to know from other migrants that police were not allowing outsiders to enter Saharanpur.

Like Sahni, thousands of labourers are arriving in Uttar Pradesh every day from Haryana, Punjab, Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir en route to their villages in Bihar and other states after their factories closed for the lockdown.

Sanjay Kumar, divisional commission­er of Saharanpur, admitted that many migrants were venturing into the district through the river. It is very difficult to check their movement on such a large river, he said.

An Uttar Pradesh government official, who asked not to be named, said officials from Haryana were handing over returning migrant workers from the state to officials at the border.

“We are making arrangemen­ts to send them back to their respective villages and towns,” he said.

A few thousand labourers were intercepte­d at border check points and kept in a shelter home of Saharanpur before they were sent to Bihar on Shramik special trains started for migrant workers. Sanjay Kumar said over 2,500 labourers were sent to Bihar in the past two days and 4,500 labourers are now being sent by buses.

 ?? RAJEEV BHARDWAJ/HT PHOTO ?? With borders guarded, people take the help of locals to cross the n
Yamuna through its shallower parts.
RAJEEV BHARDWAJ/HT PHOTO With borders guarded, people take the help of locals to cross the n Yamuna through its shallower parts.

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