Hundreds of children of migrant workers like Guddi
are on the roads with their parents, struggling to return home after losing
their work during the lockdown imposed on March 25 to curb the spread of
Covid-19.
|
Agencies
New Delhi: Under a flyover near the
Delhi-Uttar Pradesh (UP) border in Ghazipur, eight-year-old Guddi was trying to
engage her three younger siblings in play on a hot Thursday afternoon. “Keep
your hands on each other’s shoulders and make a circle. Let’s all laugh
together now,” she said. Her siblings, two sisters and a brother, obeyed.
Guddi’s family was among hundreds of migrant workers
gathered in Ghazipur with the hope of boarding a bus for their villages. Her
family is from a village in UP’s Hardoi district and had come to Delhi to work
in a garment factory five years ago.
Around 2pm, as a food distribution van arrived, she and
other children quickly queued up to collect their share. “My mother asked me to
engage my siblings until the food van arrives. They were nagging her for food.
I will make them eat now,” she said.
Hundreds of children of migrant workers like Guddi are on
the roads with their parents, struggling to return home after losing their work
during the lockdown imposed on March 25 to curb the spread of Covid-19. Braving
the scorching heat, without proper food and water, they walk to the city’s
borders or registration centres to enrol themselves to travel back to their
villages.
While parents take care of their belongings, it’s the
responsibility of the children to collect food and water distributed by good
samaritans and NGOs, and look after their younger siblings.
According to the Delhi government’s data, as many as 410,000
migrant workers have registered to travel back to their homes. Of them, around
150,000 had already left as of Saturday. A majority of them have left aboard
Shramik Special trains, with most of the trains heading to UP, Bihar, Madhya
Pradesh, Jammu & Kashmir and Jharkhand. Some have also left aboard buses
arranged by the government.
Unaware of what’s happening around them, some children think
that they are going to their villages for a summer break. “We have walked from
our room in Narela to here (Ghazipur). It’s tiring. But Baba (father) said we
will have to save money for our stay in the village during the summer break. He
even massaged my legs when they started aching,” said Rani, 9, a class 3
student at a municipal school in Narela. Her family was has been trying to get
on a bus to Bhagalpur in Bihar.
Rani’s father Deepak said he could not tell his daughter
about the circumstances.“ How do I tell her that I do not have money to take an
auto? We are left with only ₹2,000. My factory
owner has not paid us for a month and now asked us to leave. I could not
even tell her we are not going for a summer break but because of the
circumstances,” he said.
Some are aware of the financial hardships their families are
facing. Roshan (11), a class 7 student in a government school in Bawana, is
worried for his family.
“My father’s employer
had asked him not to come back to work. He was working in a factory there.
Mother has also lost her work. We do not even have land in our village in
Bhagalpur. I’ve heard my parents discussing that we will have to work on
someone else’s land in the village now,” he said.
His family managed to cross the Delhi-UP border earlier this
week and reached Ghaziabad. From there, they boarded a bus home. “My school
friends must be busy with the activities and work they get on WhatsApp from
school. I also receive a message of activities and practice work every day from
school. But I can’t use the phone much now to save the battery and internet for
our journey. I hope we manage to collect enough money and return before school
reopens,” he said.
For many girls, going back to village life means “loss of
freedom”. Shabana ,14, had come to Delhi in February to get admission in a
government school in class 7. “My cousin convinced my parents to send me with
her to study in Delhi. She (cousin) and her husband were working in a bag
printing unit in Sadar Bazar. I was so happy here. For the first time in my
life, I wore a pair of jeans here. It’s not allowed at home. But they have lost
their jobs. I will have to go back to the village school now,” she said. She
and her cousin’s family had reached Ghazipur on Thursday to board a bus for
Badaun in UP.
Experts said it’s worrisome that children are going through
such difficulties. Nimesh Desai, director of the Institute of Human Behaviour
and Allied Sciences, said the institute’s staff has been interacting with
migrant families and their children in the backdrop of the pandemic.
“It’s worrying to see
children taking the role of adults. They are not only taking care of their
siblings but also their parents. Many studies have shown children have more
resilience than adults. If a natural setting is provided to them at the
earliest, there is a possibility these hardships won’t affect them
psychologically. But if it lasts for a long time, there is reason to be
worried,” he said.
Authorities at government and municipality schools have
flagged concerns about children dropping out . “It’s very difficult to contact
many of these kids who have left for their states. We tried to provide them
academic help before the summer vacations were announced, but could not reach
out to many. We don’t know where they are and if they will come back,” said
Vibha Singh, principal of a municipal school in east Delhi.
Ranjana Prasad, a member of the Delhi Commission for
Protection of Children Rights (DCPCR), said it’s too early to predict if the
reverse migration will lead to dropouts in schools.
“We still don’t know
when schools will reopen. It’s possible most migrant families will return when
things settle, since there are fewer work opportunities in the villages and a
scarcity of schools,” Prasad said.
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