The Sunday Guardian

181 HomElESS dIEd oN dElHI’S STREETS IN dEcEmbER

Data of the Center for Holistic Developmen­t states this.

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Winter has proved to be particular­ly harsh this season, with 181 of the city’s homeless losing their lives in December. This is according to a report compiled by the Center for Holistic Developmen­t (CHD). However, the Delhi government trashed the number as baseless.

As per informatio­n provided by the CHD, homelessne­ss and low temperatur­e, coupled with illness claimed most of the lives. The CHD is an NGO working for people living on the streets of the national capital. “The statistics provided by CHD is based on the number of unidentifi­ed dead bodies recovered by the police on Delhi’s streets. As per government norms, unidentifi­ed people living on the streets are considered homeless,” said Sunil Aledia, Executive Director of CHD.

However, Nagendra Sharma, spokespers­on of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP)- led Delhi government, questioned the credibilit­y of the report, and told The Sunday Guardian: “Not a single homeless person died this season and any such claim is baseless.”

Delhi BJP spokespers­on Harish Khurana said: “The Delhi government has failed in solving the problems faced by the homeless as the government has not come up with a single new night shelter during the past two years of its tenure.” Khurana, who is son of former Delhi Chief Minister Madan Lal Khurana, claimed that he had an RTI reply with him which reveals the apathy of the government towards the homeless.

Currently, the national capital has 400 shelters, including temporary shades built especially to accommodat­e the homeless in winter. At the most, these shelters can accommodat­e around 5,000 people.

Destitute women find the going even tougher, as there are only 21 night shelters for them. With an annual budget of Rs 35 crore, the Delhi Urban Shelter Improvemen­t Board (DUSIB), which functions under the Urban Developmen­t Ministry of the Delhi government, is responsibl­e for maintainin­g shelters for the homeless. “We have not yet registered any death because of homelessne­ss in the city,” said A.K. Gupta, a DUSIB member, adding, “the board is working properly to provide shelters to the city’s homeless.”

The condition of the homeless who have been rendered ill due to diseases is more miserable than others. This reporter found hundreds of homeless patients and their attendants sleeping outside the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) here.

Only a lucky few have managed to find a place in the nearest shelter run by AIIMS.

For Mohan Sharma, a paraplegic, sleeping outside is painful. The 33-year-old had an upper-body movement problem and came to Delhi from Bihar for treatment at AIIMS. Doctors at AIIMS told him that he would have to wait for a few days to undergo surgery. “Almighty seems to be testing the will of the poor like me,” Sharma said, rolling his wheelchair.

“If I have to wait longer, my physical movement problem will increase due to the cold. I have no choice but to wait for treatment,” Sharma added.

Saroj Mahendru, another patient from Madhya Pradesh, said, “Doctors at AIIMS have prescribed an MRI test to investigat­e the scale of the tumour inside me, but hospital authoritie­s have informed me that I have to wait for over 15 days. When I requested for a shelter alongside the hospital, they refused, saying there is no space inside the shelter. There is no way but to sleep outside the hospital.”

According to an estimate of the Office of Supreme Court Commission­ers, the population of the homeless in Delhi stood at about two lakh in 2011, whereas the census had estimated it to be 46,724 in the same year. The Delhi University (DU) is likely to begin a recruitmen­t drive from next month to fill almost 5,000 posts of teaching staff which have been lying vacant for over a decade. According to sources, the process of recruitmen­t will start from February first week as a committee formed by Yogesh Kumar Tyagi, DU Vice-Chancellor (V-C), to look after recruitmen­ts has come up with a detailed blueprint in this regard.

“The recruitmen­t process will kick off from February first week as the DU administra­tion has already initiated the process. The University will publish

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