Indian Migrants Walk Hundreds Of Miles To Return Home Amid COVID-19 Lockdown
An estimated half a million migrants have walked to their villages from India's big cities since India's 21-day lockdown began. The journey has been fatal for some.
AP
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NEW DELHI (AP) — They were hungry. Some had not eaten for days. Others survived on water and biscuits.
But they walked anyway for hundreds of miles, in groups of families that included men and women, young and old — all trudging along deserted highways.
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Some had nothing but flip-flops on their feet, and others lugged bags on their heads. Young parents balanced children on their shoulders.
Over the past week, India’s migrant workers — the mainstay of the country’s labor force — spilled out of big cities that have been shuttered due to the coronavirus and returned to their villages, sparking fears that the virus could spread to the countryside.
It was an exodus unlike anything seen in India since the 1947 Partition, when British colonial rule ended and the subcontinent was split between Hindu-majority India and mostly Muslim Pakistan.
India’s 21-day lockdown has effectively kept 1.3 billion people at home for all but essential trips to places like markets or pharmacies. But the world’s largest lockdown has turned into a humanitarian crisis for India’s improvised workforce.
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In this Saturday, March 28, 2020, photo, Indian migrant laborers wait for buses provided by the government to transport them to their hometowns, following a lockdown amid concern over spread of coronavirus in New Delhi, India. Over the past week, India’s migrant workers -- the mainstay of the country’s labor force -- spilled out of big cities that have been shuttered due to the coronavirus and returned to their villages, sparking fears that the virus could spread to the countryside.
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In this Saturday, March 28, 2020, photo, Indian migrant workers sit atop a bus, provided by the government, as others walk along an expressway to their villages.
AP
In this Saturday, March 28, 2020, photo, a young girl lies on a piece of luggage as she and her family awaits transportation to her village.
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They mostly live in squalid housing in congested urban ghettos. But with no daily earnings, no savings, and thus no way to buy food, they must head to their home villages to survive.
Train services are suspended, taxis are unaffordable and the hundreds of buses brought to the outskirts of New Delhi to ferry people home lacked enough seats.
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That leaves walking. The government told India’s top court on Tuesday that 500,000 to 600,000 migrants have walked to their villages from cities.
As the crisis worsened, authorities scrambled to arrange transport, shelter and food for them.
But it was too late.
Some people died under the physical strain of the relentless walking, while others were killed in road accidents. Some were beaten at state borders by police, who said they were just trying to manage the crowds of people.
In this Sunday, March 29, 2020, photo, migrant workers walk to their villages along the Mumbai Pune highway during 2In this Saturday, March 28, 2020, file photo, a young girl lies on a luggage as she along with her family awaits transportation to her village following a lockdown 1-day countrywide lockdown in Mumbai, India.
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In this Thursday, March 26, 2020, photo, an Indian couple carrying an infant walk along an expressway hoping to reach their home, hundreds of miles away, as the city comes under lockdown in Ghaziabad, on the outskirts of New Delhi, India.
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In this Monday, March 30, 2020, photo, an injured foot of a daily wage laborer is seen as he rests on way to his village on the outskirts of Prayagraj, India.
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In this Saturday, March 28, 2020, photo, a migrant laborer's family is silhouetted as they proceed towards their village on foot from New Delhi, India.
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Shiv Kumari, 50, said she was thrown out of her rented accommodation in the northern state of Haryana by her landlord. She and her 28-year-old son packed their bags and set off on an arduous journey of 900 kilometers (550 miles) to their home.
On Monday afternoon, the mother-son duo, visibly exhausted, crossed a bridge over the Yamuna River, which is considered sacred by Hindus. But they were still 110 kilometers (68 miles) short of their destination.
“We have been walking for last five days,” Shiv Kumari said.
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