A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, March 30, 2020
India: COVID-19 Lockdown Puts Poor At Risk
Ensure All Have Access to Food, Health Care
A Statment by Human Rights Watch
Indian authorities need to urgently adopt measures to protect the
country’s poorest and most vulnerable people if COVID-19 containment and
relief measures prove inadequate, Human Rights Watch said today. On
March 24, 2020, the government announced a three-week nationwide
lockdown to contain the spread of coronavirus in the country.
The lockdown has already disproportionately hurt marginalized
communities due to loss of livelihood and lack of food, shelter, health,
and other basic needs. The government does have a responsibility to
protect the health and well-being of the population, but some of these
steps have left tens of thousands of out-of-work migrant workers
stranded, with rail and bus services shut down. The blanket closing of
state borders have caused disruption in the supply of essential goods,
leading to inflation and fear of shortages. Thousands of homeless people
are in need of protection. Police actions to punish those violating
orders have reportedly resulted in abuses against people in need.
“The Indian government is facing an extraordinary challenge to protect
over a billion densely packed people, but ramped-up efforts to prevent
the spread of the coronavirus in India need to include rights
protections,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, South Asia director at Human
Rights Watch. “Authorities should recognize that malnourishment and
untreated illness will exacerbate problems and should ensure that the
most marginalized don’t bear an unfair burden from lack of essential
supplies.”
On March 26, the central government announced a relief package of 1.7
trillion rupees (US$22.5 billion) to provide free food and cash
transfers to the poor and vulnerable populations, and health insurance
for healthcare workers, among other things. The government should ensure
that those at heightened risk, including sanitation workers (safai
karamcharis), community health staff (ASHA workers), early childhood
caregivers (anganwadi workers), and people such as midday meal workers –
often poorly paid public service officials – who are at the front lines
during this crisis, are provided protective equipment, medical
benefits, and timely wages.
With more than 80 percent of India’s workforce employed in the informal
sector, and one-third working as casual laborers, it is crucial that the
authorities make use of maximum available resources to ensure the
delivery of services.
The government should take urgent steps to get stranded migrant workers
to safety. State governments across the country should immediately set
up shelters and community kitchens for those most at need, taking
measures to ensure physical distancing.
The government should not use Aadhaar (identity card)-based biometric
authentication for the distribution of free food grains to the poor,
Human Rights Watch said. Even in normal circumstances, failure of Aadhar
has led to denial of essential services and benefits. In Delhi, Muslims
displaced by the communal violence in February urgently need relief,
compensation and shelter.
The government should pay pending wages for all work under the Mahatma
Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act and expand its scope to
those now forced out of work. Rural laborers will not be able to work
because of the lockdown and should be given wages during the crisis.
Farming communities are facing losses during harvest season and the
government needs to step up procurement to protect agricultural income
and save the produce.
The authorities should immediately order the police to act with
restraint while enforcing the lockdown. In several states, photos and
videos show police beating people who are trying to get essential
supplies. In West Bengal, police allegedly beat a 32-year-old man to
death, after he stepped out of his home to get milk. A video from Uttar
Pradesh shows police forcing migrant workers, who were trying to walk
home, to hop on the street to humiliate them. Police in Maharashtra
allegedly beat homeless people to evict them from streets. Police have
targeted daily wage workers, such as vegetable and fruit vendors, milk
sellers, auto rickshaw and taxi drivers, and others delivering essential
goods. Police have also allegedly harassed doctors and health workers.
Human Rights Watch is increasingly concerned about stigmatization of
individuals and a rise in vigilante violence. Police in several states,
including Punjab, Rajasthan, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, and
Andhra Pradesh have arbitrarily punished people or publicly shamed them,
forcing them to hold posters saying “I am an enemy of society because I
will not stay at home.”
In Uttar Pradesh, Delhi, Telangana, and Tamil Nadu, health workers and
airline staff faced discrimination from their neighbors and landlords
threatened to evict them, fearing they could be carriers of COVID-19.
People who have been quarantined have also been stigmatized and
threatened with eviction. The national health minister expressed sadness
at social discrimination against doctors, nurses, and paramedics.
Despite rising mob violence in India, the state governments of Rajasthan
and Karnataka made the names and addresses of people affected by
COVID-19 public, putting them at risk of assault. In Delhi, Chandigarh,
Maharashtra, Rajasthan, West Bengal, and Uttar Pradesh, officials marked
homes where people were under quarantine, in some cases displaying
their names. The Election Commission allowed the use of indelible ink to
stamp people for home quarantine and Maharashtra government said it
would stamp the left hand of all those sent to home quarantine –
heightening their risk of abuse.
Jan Swasthya Abhiyan, the People’s Health Movement called these measures
“arbitrary and reactionary” that “would instead cause fear, isolation
and stigmatization” and prevent people from coming forward for testing.
In a letter to the national minister of health, it urged the government
to stop these measures and respect the privacy and confidentiality of
those affected by COVID-19.
“The authorities in India should take all necessary steps to ensure that
everyone has access to food and medical care, and that the poor and
marginalized are not mistreated or stigmatized,” Ganguly said. “The
Indian government’s responsibility to protect its people from the
outbreak should not come at the cost of human rights violations.”

