Lockdown Heroes: A Budding Entrepreneur Comes To The Rescue Of Stranded Migrants

She ran from pillar to post and used her social media influence to get the job done. A testament to what kindness towards strangers can achieve

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She ran from pillar to post and used her social media influence to get the job done. A testament to what kindness towards strangers can achieve

Saisri Akondi had come from Pune to meet a friend in Manipal, Karnataka, just before the coronavirus lockdown was announced. The 23-year old wasn’t able to do much after the lockdown came into force. Meanwhile, her colleagues at a laboratory back in Pune continued working on innovative methods to deal with the coronavirus.

"Quite honestly, I was feeling helpless and frustrated that I wasn't able to do anything worthwhile," says Akondi, a budding entrepreneur. But she got a chance to do her bit, albeit outside her field of expertise.

On the evening of 11 May, she was on a scooty with her friend when she noticed a group of migrants, including women and children, talking to the police. When she stepped forward and asked them what the matter was, they said that they were on their way to Mahabubabad district in Telangana, more than 680 kilometres away, and the local police had stopped them.They were railway construction workers who had been abandoned by their contractor after the lockdown. "I instantly thought of helping them as there were 10 very small children and a pregnant lady in the group," recalls Akondi.

Then began a seven-day struggle to send them back home. "On 12 May, I registered each one of them on the Seva Sindhu Karnataka portal. This would enable them to get movement passes within the state. They were clueless about this facility," Akondi says.

Akondi registering migrant labourers on a government portal

With the help of a group called Humanitarian Relief Society, Akondi was able to arrange for food for the migrants. She also sought the help of the Manipal police to persuade the rai...

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