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In India's big COVID brawl, the government has announced free ration to all the ration card holders but the ground reality was entirely different when I reached to a colony of labourers and daily wage workers in Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh.
Rakhi Mandi is one of the oldest slums of Kanpur located on a landfill site next to a busy railway line. Here, residents are of unofficial settlements and lack the legal rights to build permanent houses of their own. Though Rakhi Mandi has not witnessed any coronavirus cases yet, they are occupied by umpteen other problems which contribute to one's survival.
For the people of Rakhi Mandi, the political fracas is something that they have witnessed since years.
Nothing mattered to them until the pandemic came into their lives and since then their life has been exposed to brutal havoc and the apparent politics that has left them helpless.
Rekha’s husband is a daily wage worker, who picks coal to deliver to hotels in the city. Raising four kids is a tough job for Rekha and is getting tougher by the day as the COVID crisis tightens its grip over the country. She dreams that her daughter, who is very fond of dancing, goes to a dance reality show. With all her savings exhausted, her kids sleep hungry every night.
Rekha’s husband tells me the problems in free ration schemes of the government.
In the interiors of the slum, I spoke with people I saw standing on either side of a nullah.
Asaaram, who is a sweeper, was sitting on one side of the road, wailing.
The virus has made his life miserable as now people have become more conscious and seldom allow house-help to enter their homes.
Job loss in this prevailing pandemic has become one of the foremost issues globally.
Like the majority of our population, people of Rakhi Mandi have no alternatives left. Arvind, who has a responsibility to feed five members of his family, has been left shattered.
Arvind is not the only one who has lost his job. Everyday, people like Arvind sit near a shop in their area with a hope that someone would employ them for menial work. The repercussions of the virus are far more than one can ever think of.
As with everything else, the uncertainty over the future of their children is adding to the misery of Rekha Mandi’s residents. A rickshaw-puller Tej Bahadur says as he sits with gloomy eyes besides his 10-year-old son,
For the children in Rakhi Mandi, whenever their father goes out they are filled with hopes of their fathers returning with ration essentials, which repeatedly diminish when they return with empty hands.
The residents of Rakhi Mandi broke down while telling their woes as it is very difficult to survive in this time of global crisis and the political prejudices just add to it.
Kamla crumbled while narrating how she has been living for almost two months without work. The politics over ration pushes her to more darkness in these tough times.
“Some people in our area are linked to certain political parties. These big ration vans come and deliver free ration to those 2-3 houses only. What is our fault?,” she asks.
Rakhi Mandi’s agony is an example of the persisting problems in several other areas. As the vulnerable population is suffering every day, the loopholes in our system have become more evident. For how long will the powerful enjoy their power and the poor will curse their fate?
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