New Delhi: Migrant labourers are skilled workers but during the lockdown they have been treated like beggars and left in the lurch, says Aruna Sharma, a Delhi based development economist and former civil servant, adding that the society will have to work hard and devise better policies to win back the confidence of migrant workers only then they will return to cities which is essential for restarting the economic activity in the country.
The horrifying journey of millions of migrant workers have brought them to the centre-stage of the national debate as they were left stranded in the cities and metros amid a nationwide lockdown with no jobs and place to sustain them in cities.
For nearly two months, millions of migrant workers can be seen walking for hundreds of kilometers to reach the safety and comfort of their villages and small towns.
Scores of migrant workers have been forced to embark on this tortuous journey with their family and belongings under the scorching sun as the government suspended all modes of public transports to slow down the community spread of novel coronavirus.
The highly contagious virus has killed more than 3,100 people in the country and has infected more than 1,00,000 people. The Covid-19 virus has killed more than 3,20,000 people and infected nearly 5 million people worldwide.
In response to a question, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman last week admitted that 8 crore people have been housed in the shelter homes managed by states and civil society groups across the country.
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However, she denied that this was the official number of migrant workers in the country, saying that her information was based on inputs received from States and the Centre has devised its relief package accordingly.
However, the torturous journey, the stories of accidents and assurance from the governments both at the Centre and state level have not deterred millions more from walking back home despite unspeakable misery.
“I think none of us has a right to stop them. They should go home, meet their family, provide for their family and be in the comfort zone,” former steel secretary Aruna Sharma told ETV Bharat.
The former bureaucrat says that it will take at least two-to-three months to restore the confidence of migrant workers.
"You can't make it happen forcefully. They also need assurance that they and their families are safe and they will be provided for if they come back to cities. There is a need to assure them that they will not have to go through this agony again," she said.
She says it is very important to start the reverse migration which is very crucial for kick-starting the economic activity post lockdown.
Skilled workers treated like beggars
The crisis of migrant workers also triggered a war of words between the ruling BJP and opposition parties who blamed the government for leaving them in the lurch.
Civil society workers also came forward to distribute ration, cooked meals and other essentials to the migrant workers.
However, some of them also converted the plight of migrant workers into some kind of publicity opportunity for themselves as social media was flooded with the photos and selfies of people handing out the relief material and clicking the pictures of recipients.