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Outside the Bowring hospital mortuary in Bengaluru, several police personnel have blocked the main gate, preventing the sanitary workers dressed in brown uniforms from entering the building.
Inside lie the bodies of three men from Andhra Pradesh, who lost their lives while cleaning a manhole in the city in the wee hours of Tuesday. As everybody awaits the arrival of their families to identify the bodies, there is anger among the workers.
An outsourced employee of the BWSSB, Mukund has grown numb to the many deaths of his colleagues and friends in a similar manner.
Gangadhar, president of Sanitary Workers’ Association Bengaluru says that the association has no information about the deceased, for they were not from the city.
"We ask our workers not to do the job without safety gears and masks. But in this case, we are at a loss. These three were were made to enter the manhole at 12:30 am, which is a grave crime," he said.
GN Nagendra, Bengaluru convenor of Safai Karmachari Gandonadatha is set to submit an enquiry report on the deaths to its New Delhi headquarters and demand criminal action against those concerned.
"Since the workers were not from Bengaluru, nobody has any information about their identity. It is outrageous that the BWSSB boss is claiming ignorance of its own contractor employing manual scavengers," he said.
The private contractor who employed the three workers is absconding.
However, BWSSB, who is the principal employer, was quick to claim ignorance about the incident and refused to take responsibility.
Speaking to TNM, chief engineer Manjunath said that the Board would never employ manual scavengers and that the private contractor had done so without their knowledge. Asked about the Board’s accountability in the death, the official decided to evade the question.
Clifton Rozario, president of BBMP Guttige Powrakarmikara Sangha said, “The death of these workers have become mere numbers now. Even then several deaths are pushed under the carpet. What the officials forget is that behind every number is a family who lost an earning member.”
He invoked the SC guidelines on manual scavenging, saying that the workers are forced to do such work.
He asserted that the BWSSB cannot at any cost wash its hands off the matter, though it has become the standard response of the Board whenever a death occurs.
"BWSSB is supposed to provide safe working conditions to its workers. They cannot pin all the responsibility on the private contractor since they are the principal employer. Complete government apathy and lack of concern is what is being reflected here,” Clifton said.
RTI activist Narasimha Murthy who is set to approach the human rights commission on the matter said that a criminal case should be filed against BWSSB.
He said that 57 manual scavengers have died in Karnataka since 2008.
Clifton indicated the possibility of one or more persons belonging to Dalit families. In that case, he said, cases under SC/ST Atrocities Act 2015 and manual scavenging act must be charged.
Visiting the hospital, Social Welfare Commissioner Vikas Kumar told reporters that necessary action will be taken against the concerned persons soon.
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