We Threw Our Workers Under The Bus

The injustice against our migrant workforce will linger in our collective conscience

offline
The injustice against our migrant workforce will linger in our collective conscience

There was blood on the tracks—a few rotis and personal belongings strewn around. Sixteen migrant labourers were sleeping on the rails, exhausted from walking for hours on their journey home in the gruelling heat, assuming trains were not running. They were run over by a freight train on 8 May near Maharashtra’s Aurangabad. Then there was the child trying to wake his mother, lying dead on Muzaffarpur railway station, on 25 May. She had reportedly died from extreme heat, exhaustion and lack of food and water.

These searing images will linger in our collective memory in a way that no statistical analysis or reportage can. While the COVID-19 toll has crossed 24,000, the reported deaths due to the lockdown—caused by accidents, starvation or financial distress and intolerable hardship—approaches the 1,000 mark (according to a public database).

At a time when the entire country was at a standstill, our migrants had to do the moving—not in hope but in desperation. A survey of 5,000 self-employed, casual and regular wage workers across 12 Indian states, conducted between 13 April and 23 May by researchers of the Azim Premji University, found that two-thirds of those surveyed lost work, and those who didn’t had their earnings drop by more than half. Nearly 80 per cent of them were eating less food than before.

Also, nearly two-thirds of the respondents in urban areas did not receive any of the cash transfers announced by central and state governments. No wonder the migrant workers decided to head home. They grabbed a few personal items and some dry food for the journey—rotis and biscuits (the only industry where sales peaked during April and May). Ironically, the government’s economic package, that did very little for them but was grandiosely called Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan, provided the perfect title for their odyssey.

Migration is all about mobility, and yet, when they desperately ...

Read more!