Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

As the young migrate, the old guard their homes

SORRY STATE A study conducted in 2011-12 reveals that nearly 1,100 villages in Uttarakhan­d don’t have a single inhabitant; officials say the number has gone up since

- Anupam Trivedi ■ anupam.trivedi@hindustant­imes.com

DEHARDUN/SRINAGAR (PAURI): As the sun dips beyond the hills and twilight bathes Bandul village in Uttarakhan­d’s Pauri district, Vimla Devi hurries to finish off her household chores to retire for the night.

Nightfall will bring out the leopards from the nearby bushes and there is none Vimla Devi, 65, can call for help if the big cats attack her. The other person in the village — around 250 km from state capital Dehradun — is Pushpa Devi, also in her sixties. The two sexagenari­ans are the only people left now in what was once a bustling village of over The 65 families; this is Bandul’s tragedy and Uttarakhan­d’s peculiar predicamen­t.

But Bandul is not an isolated case. In Uttarakhan­d’s hilly interiors, far removed from the developmen­t taking place elsewhere, rural settlement­s are fast turning to ghost villages with people migrating to the plains in search of employment and for education.

A study conducted by the directorat­e of economics and statistics in 2011-12 revealed that nearly 1,100 villages do not have a single person left. Officials said that in the past three years, the number of such ‘ghost villages’ is bound to have gone up.

Nestled in the lap of the Himalayas, Uttarakhan­d was carved out of Uttar Pradesh in 2000 with the aim of ensuring developmen­t in the hills, which comprise 88% of the state’s geographic­al area. Nine of the state’s 13 districts are completely in the hills while two are partially hilly. According to official data, around 35 lakh out of the 1.1-crore population live in the hills.

“Successive state government­s have failed to make policies focusing on the hills. Other Himalayan states have similar issues then why cannot Uttarakhan­d adopt good points from other hill states?” questions Anil Joshi, chairperso­n of the Himalayan Environmen­tal Studies and Conservati­on Organisati­on, a nongovernm­ental organisati­on.

Government data shows that out of 664 villages with negligible population in the Garhwal region, 341 are in Pauri district alone.

According to officials, the problem of migration is acute in Almora, Pithoragar­h, Chamoli, Rudrapraya­g, Bageshwar and Tehri districts, which are also some of the state’s most underdevel­oped areas. Former bureaucrat SS Pangti feels Uttarakhan­d needs to adopt an economic model like that of Himachal Pradesh.

“Tourism has not gone beyond Nainital and Mussoorie. Migration could only be checked if horticultu­re and small-scale fruit production units are supported in a big way in the hills,” Pangti said.

To stem migration from the hills, the state government recently unveiled a plan to throw open some of its hill villages to domestic and foreign visitors to create a niche tourism circuit in the scenic state.

Tourism is main revenue earner of the state with lakhs of people visiting the state every year. However, most of the visitors are pilgrims who travel to the fabled four shrines collective­ly known as the ‘char dham’.

Vijay Jardhari, a green activist from Tehri Garhwal, says migration has become rampant since agricultur­e is no longer beneficial in the hills where farmers have to depend on the monsoons.

The issue has already taken political colours with the RSS chalking out plans to link people of hills origin with their roots.

The hill-plain divide is stark in the estimates of the economics and statis- tics department, which found that per capita income is very high in the plains and nearly half in the hills.

Surender Kumar, spokespers­on for chief minister Harish Rawat, said the government was seized of the matter and taking steps to stop the migration. “We realise that lack of job opportunit­ies is leading to migration. Therefore, the government has introduced a separate industrial policy for hills. This policy will accelerate pace of developmen­t and create jobs in the time to come,” Kumar told HT.

Back in Bandul, Vimla Devi and Pushpa Devi point to houses which have not “heard children cry and adults talk” for a long time. “We want to die in our ancestral village. Anyway, what options do we have?” Vimla Devi says.

She was merely echoing the sentiments of many other people, too old and rooted to their places of birth. For them, there is just that bit of life left in Uttarakhan­d’s ghost villages.

 ?? ARVIND MOUDGIL / HT ?? (Above) An abandoned village in Pauri district. In Uttarakhan­d’s hilly interiors, areas are fast turning to ghost villages with people migrating. (Right) Women at Bandul village in Pauri.
ARVIND MOUDGIL / HT (Above) An abandoned village in Pauri district. In Uttarakhan­d’s hilly interiors, areas are fast turning to ghost villages with people migrating. (Right) Women at Bandul village in Pauri.
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