Two migrant workers from Uttar Pradesh were shot and injured by terrorists in Budgam, Central Kashmir, on Friday, Nov. 2. The migrants were identified as Sufiyan and Usman Malik who worked in the Mazhma area of Budgam, the Hindustan Times reported. They were shifted to Srinagar Hospital and doctors attending to them said they were stable. They were working as daily wage workers with the government’s Jal Shakti Department, according to the media reports.
Internal remittances need focus too, says Jairam Ramesh
Congress’s General Secretary, Jairam Ramesh, welcomed RBI Governor’s Shashikant Das proposal for reducing the time and cost of remittances from abroad last month but pointed out that 3 out of 10 Indians are internal migrants, those who live in another state and send money back home, and they should get attention as well.
Ramesh said on social media platform ‘X’, formerly Twitter, that data on internal remittances is not collected cohesively, and some findings show interstate remittances could be a tenth of remittances from abroad.
Andhra Pradesh has requested more time to issue ration cards for the pending 14,683 out of the eligible 1.25 persons identified in the state, while Karnataka is yet to issue ration cards to 1.31 lakh identified workers. Odisha informed the court that they had issued ration cards to 3.5 lakh workers.
The Migration Story has previously reported on the trouble migrants were facing in accessing ration cards. Development economist Dipa Sinha, who is also a member of the Right to Food campaign, spoke about the confusion around digital verification – e-KYC – with migrants travelling to their home states to get it done. “We have seen a lot of confusion, also in Uttar Pradesh, of migrants going back to their villages only to get their e-KYC done,” she said.
Registration of Migrants in Shimla mandatory
Those not complying with the new rules can be charged under Section 223 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS) 2023. These orders of the District Magistrate have come into immediate effect and will be in force for two months.
As per a report in The Hindu, last month, Samirul Islam, Chairperson of the West Bengal Migrant Workers Welfare Board, stated that officers had been in contact with a group of migrants since September 18 after they were hospitalized in Chennai. These workers, from Chandrakona, Paschim Medinipur, had travelled to Chennai without informing their families, and the middleman was unresponsive when the families tried to reach him.
Dr Therani Rajan, head of Madras Medical College and dean of Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital, in conversation with The New Indian Express, said that they experienced common symptoms of food poisoning such as vomiting and diarrhoea, and Samar Khan, a migrant worker from West Bengal, suffered from complications related to acute gastroenteritis caused by contaminated food.
He further added that a group of 12-13 people, including Khan, had travelled to Chennai for work and were living near the Chennai Central Railway platform for two-three days. Out of several patients admitted, one was critical, another was in bad shape, while four others were severely dehydrated but conscious.
The critical patient was placed on a ventilator for seven days. Following some improvement in their condition, the ventilator was removed. However, two days later, the patient developed complications again, leading to multiple organ failure.
West Bengal Governor CV Ananda Bose, in his address, criticized the state government for its failure to protect migrant workers. He accused Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee of neglecting the welfare of migrants, such as Khan, who leave the state in search of better opportunities.
West Bengal BJP spokesperson Shamik Bhattacharya attributed the lack of investment to the state’s precarious law and order situation.
Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee expressed concern about the deaths of West Bengal migrants in various Indian state and pledged ₹2 lakh for the families.
Compiled by Mansi Bhaktwani