The Other Side of India

About the state of rural India and unreported aspects of society which the market-driven media often ignores.

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Scavengers !!!!!!!

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What a shame! (28-01-2007)
- Deepak Tiwari

MADHYA PRADESH

Dalits continue to carry human waste on their heads


In Dhana village of Sagar district, Kusumbai steps out of her home at 8 a.m., with a bamboo basket and a metal plate. She is off to collect human waste from the dry latrines in the neighbourhood. Her salary: six rotis a day and Rs 30 a month.
She finishes her rounds by 11.30 a.m., takes a bath and returns to the houses she had visited earlier to collect rotis for her family's lunch. After a meal, she does her household chores and looks after her pigs; pig rearing adds to the family kitty. In the evening, she heads back to the same houses to collect rotis for dinner and breakfast the following day.
Kusumbai is not the only manual scavenger in the state. Radhabai, Kamalabai, Reena, Munni, Sushma, Shantabai, Ramvati, Phulwati, Kiran and others-mostly from the Balmiki, Dhanuk, Methar and Bhangi castes-remove human excreta with a metal plate, sometimes even using their bare hands. The waste goes into the bamboo basket, which is carried to the disposal site.
Strangely, there is no conclusive count on the number of scavengers in the 48 districts of Madhya Pradesh. The ministry of social justice and empowerment says there are 80,000 manual scavengers in the state, second only to Uttar Pradesh, with 1.49 lakh. The National Safai Karmchari Commission puts the figure at 18,000, while the state Human Rights Commission pegs it at 7,000.

However, the most reliable figure seems to be that of Garima Abhiyan, an NGO, which conducted a door-to-door survey of 13 districts and found 2,263 scavengers. "Women comprise 93 per cent of the workforce," says Asif, convener of Garima Abhiyan, which is on a statewide campaign to eradicate scavenging and is a joint petitioner in the Supreme Court on the issue.
The state government, however, in an affidavit filed before the Supreme Court on August 21, 2004, said that there is a gazette notification that manual scavenging does not exist anywhere in the state and that it is undertaking all possible steps to rehabilitate people engaged in it. Investigations and field visits done by THE WEEK confirmed that there are still many involved in the job.
Kusumbai does not want to speak on the issue, as her roti is at stake; moreover, schemes for rehabilitation of scavengers are only for men. But Dhapubai of village Parda in Neemuch district, says, "We are forced to carry human waste because the society forces us; they do not want to invest in flush latrines." She is ready to kick the job the day she gets an alternative one.
Though the Madhya Pradesh Panchayat Raj Act 1993 stipulates that all representatives who do not construct flush latrines in their homes within one year of their election could be dismissed, the state government is hesitating to take action. This is because a survey revealed that nearly 75 per cent of panchayat representatives (2,44,954 out of 3,28,767) have not installed them.
"This is a social problem and things will not improve unless the community comes forward," says Asif. His NGO, aided by the community, helped 1,624 villagers in 13 districts leave the job and adopt alternate means of livelihood. In 2002, his team succeeded in persuading scavengers of Bhoransa village in Dewas district to shun the job. And, 26 villagers set fire to their bamboo baskets. Since then, many have joined Garima Abhiyan to press the community to dismantle dry latrines. "We write slogans and drop pamphlets at homes," says Asif, who has often faced opposition for his persistence.

Where is my daughter : 10000 tribals girls missing from Madhya Pradesh

Where is my daughter?
- Deepak Tiwari

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NGO says 10,000 girls are missing in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh



One moment Nandlal Padwar is filled with hope, the next moment he is overwhelmed with grief. Three years ago, the Gond tribal of Gudli in Madhya Pradesh sent his daughter Manisha, 22, to work as a domestic help in Delhi for Rs 1,500 a month. The last time he phoned her on a number that the agent, Kamla, had given him was one and a half years ago. Thereafter, every time he asked Kamla about his daughter, she threatened to kill him.

He sold everything he had-two oxen and his wife's jewellery-to take policemen to Delhi in search of his daughter. Padwar has now turned to Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan for help.

If parents of all missing girls were to write to Chauhan, his office would be flooded with thousands of letters. Naresh Biswas, who runs the NGO Nirman in rural Mandla, conducted a door-to-door survey in areas under three police stations in Mandla with the help of the police. What he found was shocking: nearly 500 girls had been sent to various metros from here ostensibly for a job or vocational training. Most girls had not returned to their native villages in two or three years. Initially, parents got some money and an occasional call, but now they have no clue about their whereabouts. The police have registered cases against Asish Ekka of Sahara Service Bureau in New Delhi under the child labour act, and for abduction and rape.

Biswas estimated that 5,000 girls were missing from Dindori, Balaghat, Seoni and Mandla districts in Madhya Pradesh, and 5,000 from Kawardha, Bilaspur, Dantewada, Jaspur and Raigarh districts in Chhattisgarh.

Last year, Mandla Superintendent of Police Niranjan Vayangankar and Biswas rescued 64 girls from Delhi. Yashoda, 14, was one of them. An agent promised her Rs 1,000 a month and free training in sewing. She got neither; instead Ekka sent her to three houses in Delhi in just a month. "The driver in the first house misbehaved with me. When I threw a fit, Ekka shifted me to a new house where I was physically abused," she said. "I sneaked a call to my mother and they allowed me to return after she threatened to lodge a complaint with the police."

The parents of Manota Bai, 12, have no trace of her. "We have not been able to talk to her on phone," said her father Sunhar Singh Dhurve. "Even when our son died recently we could not get her back."

Manota's mother, Mangli Bai, said she regretted having fallen to greed when Ekka's agents promised her Rs 1,000 a month. "I have got nothing so far," she cried. "Now I have lost my daughter, too." The family has not gone to the police as they know it is illegal to send a minor child for work.

Activists say many girls land up in brothels. "Getting minor girls from remote areas to work as domestic help is the first stage of human trafficking," said Rishikant, an activist of the NGO Shaktivahini, who rescued more than 100 such girls from Delhi last year. "Almost all the girls trapped in households are sexually abused. Later they meekly succumb to it. Once they lose contact with their families back home they are inducted into prostitution."

Vayangankar said there was an organised racket operating in the central Indian states and Uttaranchal, Jharkhand and Bihar targeting tribal girls who are vulnerable to the lures of a good life. In Mandla, Dindori, Balaghat and Seoni districts 49.2 per cent of the rural population is below poverty line; the state average is 37.06 per cent.

Touts generally tempt children-and sometimes parents-with promises of free job training and lucrative salaries. Schools are the hunting grounds of these touts. "Even teachers work as agents," said Vayangankar. "They tell children about the glitzy life in the metros."
In April last year, the police arrested Sugriv Ahirwar, a schoolteacher, for sending girl students to a placement agency in Delhi. He, apparently, got Rs 500 a girl.

Sugriv and his brother Shriram allegedly abducted six girls of Bhapsa village who were returning from school. Pardeshi Sayyam, the father of one of the girls, went to the police on hearing about the abduction, and they arrested the brothers and rescued the girls.

M.D. Mongre, a retired forest employee, said Chottibai, a woman in charge of mid-day meals for schoolchildren, acted as the agent in Manegaon village. Ramkali Marko, headmistress of Government Primary School in Bhada, said two girls, Saraswati and Rajkumari, were 'abducted' during exams.

"My daughter was taken away when nobody was at home and I was working in the fields," said Saraswati's father, Dina Gond, who went to Delhi to track his daughter and met Ekka. "He gave me Rs 4,000 and said the police would arrest me if I did not leave immediately."
Most parents whom THE WEEK visited did not know the whereabouts of their children. All of them had a telephone number, usually a mobile number, which gave the stock reply, "Your daughter has left this place."

Sadabai is the sarpanch of Harrabhat village. Her granddaughter Yashodabai Uike has been missing for the past eight months. "Why would we send our child to Delhi for a job when we give employment to many people," she said. But her husband, Dhulia Singh Marwari, said they were trying to get in touch with the agents in the village and in Delhi to get back the child. Sadabai has not complained to the police because she thought "the child might have gone with the consent of her parents".

Vayangankar said parents reported such missing cases only when the girls or agents stopped sending them money. "This is basically a social problem and we can only act if we get complaints. But people don't come forward," said Vayangankar. "We have now evolved a new beat system in a few villages where one havaldar keeps a watch on girls going out."

The police have also initiated sensitisation of their staff and villagers. In the past year, four training programmes were organised with the help of the state SC/ST and women police cell. Next on the agenda is the rehabilitation of girls rescued from Delhi.

Vayangankar said young boys were also abducted. "Last year, we rescued 22 minor boys who were kept as bonded labour in a factory in Hyderabad," he said.

Tribal Welfare Minister Vijay Shah told THE WEEK that he was not aware of any such missing cases. He has asked the Mandla district collector to submit a report on it.

But villagers can't afford to feign ignorance. In Bhada, where 18 girls are missing, sarpanch Jamotin Bai Partei called a meeting that made it mandatory for all those leaving the village for over a month to inform the panchayat where they were going. Suspected agents are not allowed to enter the village and there were also plans, as Mongre said, "to ostracise those parents who send their minor children with agents to metros".

Seeds of change

In his 20 years of work among tribals, nothing has given Naresh Biswas more satisfaction than his efforts to persuade the administration to rescue minor girls held hostage in Delhi. "I was shocked to know that agents had lured them with good jobs," said Biswas who made a list of more than 450 missing girls in a single block after a door-to-door survey in Mandla. "The racket is so strong that the police are helpless."
Biswas and his wife, Muniya Marskole, a tribal, move from village to village spreading awareness about the evil designs of those who lure girls. He has asked several employers to send the girls back or face legal action. Many of them were not aware that the money did not reach the girls' families. Biswas's action helped some of them come back.

According to him, the fact that tribal girls are lured with jobs shows how government employment schemes are ineffective. Illiteracy is another bane. Asish Ekka, the man accused of girl-running, operated under cover of an NGO named Seva Bharti.

Biswas now plans to work for the rehabilitation of the girls who have come back. The NGO he runs, Nirman, is already involved in uplifting the vanishing Baiga tribe; he is the pillar of the Baiga Mahapanchayat, a body of Baigas spread in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh.

Biswas has been able to revive the tribal tradition of Ramkothi to store grain for lean days. The group has also preserved certain seeds which grow even in scant rainfall.

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