How Some States are Looking After Their People Better in These Crisis Times

1. Kerala Govt Running 65% of Shelter Camps for Migrants After Lockdown: Centre to SC

Courtesy: The Wire Staff

The Centre has told the Supreme Court that out of the 6.3 lakh migrant workers being sheltered in government run-camps, around half – 47% – are housed in Kerala. The southern state is also running 65% of the shelter camps in the entire country.

This was included in a status report filed by Ministry of Home Affairs in the Supreme Court on Tuesday showing the steps taken by the Centre and state governments to ensure the welfare of migrant workers in over 578 districts.

The ministry’s report was in response to court proceedings in public interest litigation on the plight of migrant workers. The hearing was largely based on a petition filed by activists Harsh Mander and Anjali Bharadwaj, who had claimed that the declaration of a 21-day nationwide lockdown without a notice period had precipitated an unprecedented humanitarian crisis with migrant workers walking back en masse out of cities to their hometowns and villages.

The Hindu reported that the Centre’s affidavit stated that the Kerala government is running 15,541 camps, followed by Uttar Pradesh government at a distant second with 2,230 camps.

The newspaper reported that the home ministry had stated that across the country, the state governments are running 22,567 camps and relief shelters, which were catering to 6.3 lakh workers. Additionally, non-governmental organisations were operating 3,909 camps which have sheltered over 4 lakh migrant labourers.

The MHA status report also claimed that besides operating camps, governments gave food to over 54 lakh migrant workers in 7,848 food camps, while NGOs distributed food packets to over 30 lakh labourers in 9,473 camps. Besides, employers and private industry were also giving shelter and food to 15 lakh stranded workers.

2. In Lockdown, Tamil Nadu’s Amma Canteens Rise to the Occasion

Kavitha Muralidharan, 25 March 2020

Her day started at five in the morning. “I had to wake up at least an hour and half before that to be here at five” says Vasanthi, working at an Amma Unavagam at Ashok Nagar in Chennai. “I take a share auto to be here at five, but since I couldn’t find any today, I walked.”

Vasanthi stays two kilometres away. For her and nine more women working at the Amma Unavagam on two shifts – all from a self-help group – today was more challenging, and rewarding, than ever before. But they were well-equipped to handle the crowds. On the first day after the lockdown was in place, this branch of the Amma canteen network alone made over 600 idlis in the morning and pongal for about a few hundred people. The lunch – Sambhar rice, lemon rice and curd rice – was also getting ready for a few ‘extra’ numbers.

“There are always more demands for chapati and dal in the evening. Today we expect greater demand” says Vasanthi. The women have pooled in some money to buy masks and sanitisers for themselves. “There won’t be compromise on quality even if it means we have to shell a bit from our own pockets in times like this. After all, we too have our food here” says Renuka Devi, the leader of the SHG running this branch. “We do it just as we cook at home, because we also eat here”.

When launched by the then chief minister J Jayalalithaa in 2013, the Amma Unavagams earned their own share of criticism with many calling it a ‘stunt’ and that it led to losses for the government. Yet , in his book An Uncertain Glory – India and its Contradictions, economist and Nobel laureate Amartya Sen devotes almost ten pages to extolling the idea. Several states including Odisha, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh set up their own versions of Amma Unvagams, after witnessing its success in Tamil Nadu.

The food offered at heavily subsidised prices – idli at Re 1 each, pongal for Rs 5, lemon and sambar rice for Rs 5, curd rice for Rs 3 and two chapatis with dhal for Rs 3 – is a boon for people from the marginalised sections of society. With a relatively well-maintained kitchen and a tidy little space with tables that are frequently cleaned, “all kinds of people” come in for their meals, Vasanthi says. Provisions are provided to the Amma Unavagams by the government.

The small team headed by Renuka Devi is very particular about keeping the place clean. “The customers are asked to rinse their plates, but after that we wash them in hot water again just to be sure. We take no risk,” she says, pointing to a little child having curd rice with his mother, a member of the team. “We need to provide good and clean food for him, and for everyone else.” According to Chennai Corporation Commissioner G Prakash, all the women in charge of the canteens are trained in hygienic practices.

The Greater Chennai Corporation has announced that sanitation workers will get food at Amma unavagam for free during the lockdown period. “It is the least that we could do to them, they are the real heroes today” says G Prakash. Amma Unavagams, he says, are a great asset now and have always been so. “We have 407 canteens, which are now adequately stocked for at least 30 days. We have ensured that things are on track” he told The Wire.

Amma Unavagams across the Tamil Nadu have reported an increase in sales since the announcement of lockdown. “There is definitely an increase in Chennai too. Every canteen has the potential to cater to 2000 to 3000 people every day. All the canteens can together cater to about 10 lakh people. We have equipped them to cater for more,” says Prakash.

He adds: “The most important and great thing about amma unavagams is their geographical distributions. Every ward has two canteens, which means there is an amma unavagam for every half kilometre.” Which also means the canteens do not allow take-aways. “We do not want this to be misused. Anybody can walk for half kilometre to have their meal” says Prakash.  “Amma Unavagams will be a very strong backup system and will be a saving method for people in need.”

J. Jayaranjan, a Chennai-based economist and an expert in food security, says the Amma Unavagams will always be important for they cater to the urban poor. “Their vulnerabilities have largely remained unaddressed. The social protection schemes meant for migrant workers hardly reach them. We should also remember the gap in the labour market in recent years was being filled by them. They wouldn’t want to spend huge money on their food. For them, an Amma Unavagam means they could have a decent, fulfilling meal.” The idea of providing chapatis was an important measure in this context, he says.

Jayaranjan also acknowledges that in crisis periods like this, Amma Unavagams can only become busier and more important than ever. “Imagine, all factories and shops are closed and there are no trains for migrant workers to go back home. The announcement for a country wide lockdown came all of a sudden yesterday, where would all the migrant workers go?”

This is the second time that Amma Unavagams have effectively responded to a crisis. When Chennai was hit by Cyclone Vardah in December 2016, the canteens remained open across the city, providing free food to anyone who came in. With the coronavirus-induced lockdown leaving many daily wage labourers stranded, this important food security programme promises to rise to the occasion again.

Meanwhile, in another article, the Wire reported that a day after announcing that the state-sponsored Indira canteens would provide free food to daily-wage workers and poor people during the COVID-19 lockdown, Karnataka chief minister B.S. Yediyurappa said that the canteens would remain close.

Janata Weekly does not necessarily adhere to all of the views conveyed in articles republished by it. Our goal is to share a variety of democratic socialist perspectives that we think our readers will find interesting or useful. —Eds.

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