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Video Editor: Deepthi Ramdas
All’s well that ends well. Satvir, a migrant worker who left Delhi with teary eyes, staring at a gloomy future on 18 May, is all smiles today because of financial help from good samaritans.
On 23 May, The Quint reported on how twenty-four-year-old Satvir was stopped at the Delhi-Noida border on 18 May, when he tried to cross into Uttar Pradesh with his wife and children. After being made to wait for hours, he was allowed to enter later that evening but was asked to leave his Kulfi cart behind, which was his only source of livelihood.
But that wasn’t all. From the border, he was taken to a shelter home in Noida's Sector 19. Satvir requested the police to let him go to his uncle’s home in Noida. But local police maintained that he would only be allowed to go if his uncle came to pick him up from the shelter home.
Satvir’s uncle, an elderly man, couldn’t come to take him, and so he was forced to head to his home town in Badaun, Uttar Pradesh.
Satvir’s story struck an emotional chord with hundreds of readers not just in India but as far away as UAE, Singapore etc. One of the readers shared what motivated him to help Satvir:
Satvir has received nearly Rs 3 lakhs as donation from The Quint’s readers. He has now set up a tubewell at his small farm in Badaun with the help of the donations.
The Quint received overwhelming response from our readers when they heard that Satvir has already turned his life around in less than a month after he had lost all hope.
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