Letting migrant labourers go on humanitarian ground: Maharashtra Home Minister

Migrant workers walk on the highway on their journey back home during a nationwide lockdown to fight the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus, in Mumbai on May 8, 2020. (Photo by INDRANIL MUKHERJEE / AFP)


As reports of thousands of migrant workers desperately trying to return to their native villages even by walking on foot, the Maharashtra government has decided not to be harsh with them and let them go on humanitarian ground despite violation of lockdown norms, state Home Minister Anil Deshmukh has said.

Deshmukh said that had the train services commenced earlier, as the state government was demanding, the sufferings of labourers would have been much less.

“It is true that migrant labourers who are walking back to their home towns hundreds of kilometres away are in a way violating lockdown norms, but we are letting them go on humanitarian ground,” Deshmukh was quoted by news agency PTI as saying.

In Mumbai, last month, hundreds of migrant labourers gathered near Bandra station , demanding that transportation arrangements be made for them to go back to their native places. Police then baton-charged the workers to disperse them.

The state home ministersaid that the state government earlier tried to be strict, but extension of the lockdown “pushed the migrant labourers to the edge”.

“They are so desperate to go home that they are ready to even face the wrath of law enforcement agencies. Hence, we decided not to be harsh with them. It is not alone my ministry but the government as a whole is trying to help them,” said the minister.

“Had the train services commenced earlier, as the Uddhav Thackeray government has been demanding, the sufferings of labourers would have been much less,” he said.

Deshmukh said there was some communication gap (between the state government and labourers) which could have been corrected earlier.

“We never thought the lockdown would get extended for such a long time. We tried to speak to migrant labourers. Chief Minister Uddhav Thackeray also made several appeals, but the migrant workers decided to return home, he said.

He added that the government tried to convince migrant labourers not to leave the state by telling them that some industries have resumed and there would be more relaxations in days to come.

“During my visit to temporary shelter homes, a group of workers told me they might come back after Diwali, but now they want to go home, the minister said.

They are taking a huge risk by setting off on foot to their native places as they do not have money and resources to complete the journey, he noted.

The Maharashtra government has borne the cost of transporting 10,000 workers belonging Madhya Pradesh who were in Telangana, according to the minister.

“The Telangana government dropped them at the Maharashtra border. Our government provided them shelter and food and later dropped them at the Madhya Pradesh border. The Maharashtra government did not charge anything for it,”  he said.

Maharashtra is the worst hit state from Coronavirus pandemic with 22171 positive cases and 832 deaths so far.