Kolkata: Sandip Haldar, 24, has made it back to his village of Helencha near the Bongaon border with Bangladesh in West Bengal's North 24 Parganas just a day ahead of the crucial rural polls from the restaurant where he works as a cook's understudy in far-away Visakhapatnam. Haldar is one of tens of thousands of semi-skilled and unskilled youth from his district who work outside their village as far away as Andhra Pradesh and Kerala, to help out families struggling to earn a living from small, often uneconomic farms.
I had to come back home I was getting phone calls from friends in all major parties, asking me to come back and vote for the panchayat polls. The candidates have known us from infancy and expect us boys who work outside to come and be here on voting day, said Haldar as he lifted his new moulded plastic suitcase, a gift from his restaurant owner-employer on his shoulder and jumped on to a rickshaw which will take him on the last leg of his nearly 1,000 km journey home by train and bus.
A population boom which has seen the state's population density increase 3.44 times between 1951 and 2011, the last time a census was conducted, has also eroded farm sizes reducing it to an average of just 0.77 hectares. Despite Bengal being one of the most fertile deltas in Asia, tiny farms and falling agricultural prices have forced many village youth to migrate outwards in search of greener pastures.
Shrinking farm sizes and lack of sufficient new labour-intensive industry which can absorb the excess rural workforce results in migration of blue-collar labour some of it within the state and some intra-state. Those migrants who go out as lone males or have land holdings in rural Bengal tend to be politically more connected, while those who migrate with their families or with little or no land in the state find their political interests here waning, Dr Pronab Sen, well known economist who was the first Chief Statistician of the Indian government, told PTI.
The last census in 2011 estimated that nearly 5.8 lakh people migrated from West Bengal to other states in search of work, the fourth largest stream of internal migrants from any state after UP, Bihar and Rajasthan. Analysts believe the number has since gone up, but in the absence of verifiable data, educated guess-estimates place it at over 2 million.
Sujit Mondal, 51, a master-mason in Delhi is also going back home to Malda to vote and to be with his parents. However, this time round his wife and sons who live with him in Delhi's Tughlakabad area are not travelling with him. Everyone cannot make it and the party I am voting for will anyway win, so their (his family members) votes need not be cast, he reasoned while transiting through Kolkata.