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Home  » News » I want to go back: Migrants desperate to return home

I want to go back: Migrants desperate to return home

By Prashant Rangnekar
April 15, 2020 14:31 IST
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With the lockdown extended till May 3 to stem the spread of the coronavirus, the little money daily wagers had is mostly gone and so is hope.

IMAGE: A migrant worker carrying a stand fan and a sack of goods as he returns to his village during a 21-day nationwide lockdown to limit the spreading of coronavirus disease in Prayagraj. Photograph: ANI Photo

Their families wait back home, anxious and fearful, but maybe the harvest won't, pushing them deeper into a vicious cycle of debt there will be no getting out of, they say.

With three weeks gone and maybe another three to go before they can't even contemplate returning to their villages, the days ahead stretch interminably for the thousands of migrant labourers who decided to not take the long walk home but wait for the lockdown to end.

 

And now, with the lockdown extended till May 3 to stem the spread of the coronavirus, the little money they had is mostly gone and so is hope it will end anytime soon.

Anil Yadav, a daily wager with the parcel department of the railways who was ready to rush back to his village in Maharajganj in Uttar Pradesh to harvest wheat, is still stunned by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's announcement on Tuesday extending the pan India shutdown by 19 days.

"I have already lost the entire sugarcane crop sown in my one-acre land. It could have brought my family some money. But I can't go back and no one can harvest the crop," said the 28-year-old.

"My wife, two children (aged one and three) and old parents have no support. They can't step out even to buy necessary items. They don't have money and now I am stuck here," he said.

Sitting under a tree in the complex, dispiritedly eating his 'dal-rice' lunch, Yadav added that his family is staring at a huge financial crisis and plead with him everyday to return home.

"But how can I?" he asked. He earned Rs 7,000-8,000 a month in his job but the money and the job have both gone.

With all of India under lockdown, there are no train or inter-state bus services.

Yadav is one of the 330 people, including the homeless and migrants, staying at the Yamuna Sports Complex camp that has been turned into a shelter home by the Delhi government.

On April 1, a week after the first phase of the lockdown came into effect, Yadav was one of the many thousands who went to the Anand Vihar Interstate Bus Terminal hoping to manage a seat. Instead, he was packed into a bus by police and sent to the Yamuna Sports Complex.

Asha Devi, a mother of four, tries hard to fight back her tears as she talks about her two sons, one 14 and the other only six, alone at their village in Uttar Pradesh's Banda district.

"My two sons are all alone at home. The older one works as a daily wage labourer and looks after his younger brother. I am so scared," the 36-year-old said.

Sitting next to her is a group of 13 daily labourers, including her husband and her extended family members, from Uttar Pradesh's Banda district.

The group left their homes early last month to work in a brick kiln in rural Ghaziabad

After the lockdown, which came into effect after Modi's announcement on March 24, the contractor who hired them assured them of rations but suddenly disappeared leaving them with no money or food.

With no option left, the group walked miles to reach Anand Vihar, only to be herded by the police to the Yamuna Sports Complex.

She was forced to step out of the village with her 11-year-old daughter who helped her in the brick kiln. The eldest, also a girl, is married.

"I want to go back home. If we have to die, we will do that together," she said.

She, like the others, was pinning her hopes on the lockdown ending on Wednesday.

Yadav and Asha Devi echo the woes of tens of thousands of stranded migrant workers across the country, including in Mumbai where large crowds came out in Bandra on Tuesday clamouring to return to their villages.

Many complain there is no one to harvest their standing crop. Some said their families are being pushed to the brink with no money.

With their jobs gone, the crops could help them sustain themselves. However, losing the crop would mean certain starvation.

Gopesh Kumar, who works as a daily wager in farms in Haryana for Rs 400 a day, said he started working in a farm in Rohtak from March 15. When the lockdown began, the contractor he was working for suddenly asked him to go back.

Kumar, who belongs to Bareilly in Uttar Pradesh and is spending his days like the others at the Yamuna Sports Complex shelter, said time is running out.

"I can't earn till the lockdown ends. My family does not have money back home. Our entire standing crop of wheat has to be harvested. Who will do that?" he said.

"There would have been some relief if the lockdown was lifted. At least, I could have gone back home. But with the extension, I have to wait here for another two weeks," he said, not quite sure of his age.

Raju Kushwaha, 38, from Hathras in Uttar Pradesh, has the same question. "How will my family, including three sons, survive if we can't harvest the crop. And if I am not there, who will do it?"

The Delhi government is feeding an estimated 7,00,000 people a day in its various camps. These include migrant labourers, beggars and other homeless people.

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