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Video Editor: Varun Sharma & Sandeep Suman
Camera: Akanksha Kumar
Asha, 30, has been unemployed for the last six months. She rues, “There is no work, slowdown is there,” as she perches on a wooden stool in Delhi’s Gandhi Nagar. She sits next to three women, busy straightening newly stitched jeans and checking for errant threads and buttons.
Asha’s job was to help package newly made garments at a manufacturing unit, and used to earn her Rs 7,000 per month. Now, she waits for an opportunity as others around her work.
However, Asha is not alone – many women in this east Delhi constituency have been struggling to get work since the local factories were shut during an MCD-conducted sealing drive.
In Gandhi Nagar, considered to be Asia’s largest ready-made garment market, hundreds of women were employed as helpers, their role being scanning the length of jeans and shred the extra threads which dangled around motifs and near the stitches left behind by the machine.
27-year-old Sapna Verma, another resident of Gandhi Nagar, had migrated to Delhi from Kanpur with her husband in 2016. She too, has been looking for a job for the last few months.
Sapna’s husband continues to work at another factory in the same locality, where he gets a monthly salary of Rs 10,000.
She is reluctant to go to Sonia Vihar where some factories were shifted after the sealing drive as the daily bus fare of Rs 30 (Rs 15 per side) will mean an additional monthly expenditure of Rs 900.
“As long as factories were in our neighbourhood, it was still manageable. Can’t go to a distant location as it’s not safe,” she says.
Bhola, a tailor, and his wife, Sanju Devi, moved from Bihar’s Bhagalpur district to Delhi almost 15 years ago.
The couple recently had a baby girl and are concerned with the sudden dip in their monthly earnings.
34-year-old Mala has been out of job for last three years, ever since the factory she used to work at was re-located to Sonia Vihar.
Hailing from Jharkhand, Mala belongs to the Kumhar caste and had come to Delhi almost 10 years ago. “There is no source of livelihood in our native towns. ‘Mitti se banate hain, wahi khate hain” (We use earthen utensils, that’s how we sustain ourselves).
A monthly salary of Rs 6,000 would take care of some of her expenses.
Anger and helplessness because of the sealing drive are palpable not just among men and women who used to earn two meals a day as labourers and helpers, but also among the local trading community.
Some like Sunita, whose husband used to be a loyalist of the Congress candidate Arvinder Singh Lovely, want to give AAP another chance. “We want to try Aam Aadmi Party this time,” she says.
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