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Inside her blue-walled house, E Bhagyam sits with a faded wedding album and talks about how much she misses her husband, who works as a welder in the Gulf.
Unaware of the recent problem of Indian migrant workers stranded in Saudi Arabia with no wages or food, she said the couple have a home loan to pay off, and she has to assume her husband is fine.
“They went in a group so they must be safe,” the 36-year-old mother of two said slowly.
Like Bhagyam, in every other house in the fishing hamlet of Sadraskuppam near Kalpakkam in Tamil Nadu, a wife waits anxiously for a call from the Gulf.
There are more than 100 women “left behind”, as they are known here, living lonely lives in the small hamlet, among an estimated 1 million such wives in Tamil Nadu. They are often depressed and always worried, found a February 2016 survey commissioned by the state government.
Nearly 70 percent of the women reported feeling anxiety, fear and loneliness.
Sixty percent considered the additional responsibilities they must bear in the absence of their husbands – such as caring for elderly parents or sorting out financial matters – a big drawback of the migration.
The survey, which covered 20,000 households across 32 districts in the state, flagged health and children’s education as the other main causes of concern.
“Ironically, the women left behind are more qualified than the men and have higher standards of education,” said Bernard D’Sami from the Loyola Institute of Social Science Training and Research, one of the survey partners.
Most of them married while their husbands were on a short break from working abroad, and 90 percent of them have never travelled to their spouse’s country of work, he added.
Government figures show there are an estimated 6 million Indian migrants in the six Gulf states of Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Oman.
Over the years, the Indian government and non-governmental groups have received a steady stream of complaints from migrant workers, ranging from non-payment of wages, to torture and abuse.
In a high-profile case last month, workers sent an SOS to the Indian foreign ministry, stating that the companies they worked for had shut up shop and had not paid them for months.
VK Singh also travelled to Saudi Arabia to assess the situation and organise the return of the 7,700 Indian workers living in 20 camps for migrant labourers.
Men have been migrating to work from Kalpakkam for years. The nuclear power industry operating in this coastal town does not give them jobs, neither do local builders, who prefer the cheaper migrant workforce from northern Indian states.
“We know that life is not always comfortable in the Gulf but we keep going back because we have no choice,” said S Prabhu, a returnee migrant already looking for another job abroad.
V Kalaivani, 32, doesn’t follow the news, and knows nothing about the crisis hitting Indian workers in the Gulf.
“Over the many years my husband has travelled to Qatar and Saudi to work, I’ve got used to the idea,” said the housewife with two daughters. “I guess we have been lucky so far.”
That is the biggest challenge, said J Jeyanthi, coordinator of the non-profit Arunodaya Migrant Resource Centre.
Even a small issue like who will drop the children at school if they miss the bus turns into a big deal when husbands are away, said Kalaivani.
“Most of us have parents and in-laws living a few houses away but it’s not the same,” she said.
Many women say they do not sleep well at night.
“We wait for our husbands to call,” said Bhagyam. The phone usually rings way past midnight, when the men have finished their overtime. “In the day we are busy with housework. But at night, the loneliness is unbearable,” she said.
The women are now reaching out to one other, forming a collective under an initiative by the Arunodaya Migrant Resource Centre.
From educating themselves on the perils of migration to sharing health concerns, they provide mutual support while their men are away.
“They need each other because they are in the same situation,” Jeyanthi said. “They don’t open up immediately, but slowly they are voicing their worries. It’s a start.”
This article was published in an arrangement with the Thompson Reuters Foundation.
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