Six months after a national lockdown was imposed, I travelled to 5 villages of Allahabad (now known as Prayagraj) to talk to over two dozen migrant workers who returned home.
"Nothing feels like home" for them as they struggle to make ends meet.
Ramesh Chand (right) was 15 yrs old when his brother-in-law took him to Mumbai & gave him a job at his garment factory after his father died. Srivastava (now 46), who had made the 'city of dreams' his own, wasnt paid for during the lockdown even by his guardian.
According to official estimates, about 10 million workers returned to their home states after the lockdown. Close to one-third belonged to Uttar Pradesh and Allahabad saw the second highest reverse migration in the state (over 100,000).
Bruises of the lockdown are still fresh in their minds. Meet 54-year-old Rajendar, who had to pedal his bicycle for two days to cover the 150 km distance from Rewa in Madhya Pradesh to Matiyara, a village on the outskirts of Prayagraj.
“I carried chickpeas to feed myself, stopped at roadside dhabas for sleepovers & navigated through police atrocities. I am scared to go back, but I have 3 children to feed,” Rajendar says. His application for Mudra loan to start a grocery shop was recently turned down by a bank.
At the village pradhan's office in Matiyara, a poster was put up promoting the Garib Kalyan Rojgar Yojana launched by PM @narendramodi on June 20 to give jobs to returnee migrants. The poster is all that the 40 returnee migrants, who havent found a job yet, know about the scheme.
In Prayagraj, local job opportunities are few because, with a slowdown in consumption, small businesses have cut production. I visited a factory that produces pickles & tomato ketchup in Matiyara. It has employed 11 workers, instead of the 18 that it had in pre-COVID days.
With no government support in sight, Ghanshyam Patel (28), who used to earn Rs 15,000 a month in Surat, decided to borrow Rs 5,000 from his friends to set up a fruit stall near Chandpur village. “I will try my luck till Diwali. If nothing works, I will have to go back,” he says.
None of the workers that I interviewed received wages during the lockdown despite the government’s directive to the contrary.
The government's March 29, 2020 order (withdrawn in May) had called for compulsory wage payment to workers during lockdown.
In fact, many workers returned home leaving behind their belongings in cities where their landlord continues to charge them a monthly rent. They fear going back due to the accumulated arrears. There was no rent waiver during the lockdown either despite govt diktat.
Most complain that the village administration has done little to help them secure a source of income.
Yet returning to the cities in search of a livelihood is an uphill task, owing to the high cost of travel, esp since the Indian Railways hasn’t fully resumed its train services.
Mohammad Chand (in red), who started working in the cities at the age of 18 about 8 yrs ago, has been visiting labour chowks in Prayagraj city. But his efforts have been to no avail and Chand has stopped making his daily trips to the city. “Nothing feels like home,” he says.
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THREAD: In 2019, the Indian government decided to hide an important pan-India official survey on consumer spending. The data has been used to calculate the poverty and inequality levels in India.
I broke the story in November 2019 after a whistleblower handed me a copy of the consumer spending report's findings.
The data showed a grim picture on consumer spending, which fell for the first time in over 40 years, sparking fears that poverty might have inched up.
Here is a link to the story, which showed slackening rural demand in India in 2017-18, the year when the survey was conducted:
A year after the Modi govt came to power in 2014, India's finance ministry accused the Reserve Bank of India of setting interest rates to benefit developed countries & sought a probe. I write for @reporters_co & @AJEnglish
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Mehrishi claimed that the “only beneficiaries” of India's high interest rates were developed countries and said that the RBI has "subsidised the rich and influential in the USA, Europe and Japan.”
.@reporters_co has worked for 3 months gathering, translating & analysing physical death registers from 68 out of all the 170 municipalities in Gujarat.
The Gujarat government couldn't mask its failure to manage the second COVID wave, thanks to the exposé by the vernacular press. They mostly relied on issued death certificates as a tool to assess the toll.
Here, @reporters_co reached for the primary source - death registers.
Death registers are the first place that the passing away of people is officially recorded.
Along with public health experts, this data was tabulated and analysed scientifically by the members of @reporters_co. What we found was beyond shocking.
Personal update: I have joined as a member of The Reporters' Collective and I am totally thrilled about this new journey!
The Reporters' Collective (reporters-collective.in) is a deep-dive journalism collaborative that publishes reportage on matters of public interest across languages and mediums.
The most exciting part about being a part of the collective is the collaborations that I am looking forward to, with various publications across all mediums and languages, experts, lawyers, academia and citizens in producing quality journalism.
It has been over a month since I took a major step back and left my job, thanks to something called #burnout. I had hit a wall.... A thread:
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Perhaps the pushback was a concern for the finance ministry.
So, with the approval of the Finance Minister, it took a shortcut before unveiling the policy in the Budget (after making significant changes to the draft policy).