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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, July 30, 2001 |
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The poverty trap
The daily struggle seems never-ending for the poor in Chennai.
Even the most elementary civic services and rudimentary health
care are not theirs to demand as a right, says VISA RAVINDRAN.
HE WHO has no bread has no authority, says a Turkish proverb, and
it is nowhere more clearly illustrated than in the daily struggle
of the urban poor to get their due. Even the most elementary
civic services and rudimentary healthcare are not theirs to
demand as a right. Palms have to be greased at every turn and
while rosy Government schemes and climbing human development
indices paint a pretty picture, the real life stories of
housemaids and other domestic service providers in Chennai (and
perhaps also in other metros) reflect a heartless civic system
that fails to fulfil the purpose of its existence.
I am referring here of course, to the essential services that we
all need - the police, the postal department, hospitals and the
public distribution system whose smooth and corruption-free
working is necessary for daily living.
The various instances that were brought to my notice illustrate
not only the Turkish proverb quoted but underline the tremendous
effort required to sensitise public servants to their
responsibilities.
Manga is a domestic servant, abandoned within a few years of
marriage by her husband, who eloped with a younger woman. Her
son, Raja, is the hope of her life.
Raja, however, would rather watch movies or play video games well
into the night than work at his lessons, and is therefore
repeating the seventh class at school.
Manga works in three houses to earn enough to send him to a good
school rather than the one run by the Government. To augment her
earnings, she wanted to get the Rs. 200 monthly allowance from
the State Government given to widows and abandoned women. In
order to set the machinery moving for this and also to get a
ration card for herself, she paid a party functionary (the
political colour is irrelevant here because it is the clout of
affiliation and a certain skill to negotiate the mazes of
officialdom that matter) Rs. 2000.
After several false starts, he delivered the goods but she had to
enlist the support of a worldly-wise male relative to chase the
fixer into performing. And then, to make sure that the allowance
is given to her when she is at home and not away at work, she has
to pay the postman ten rupees every month. This sum varies
according to the size of payments and money orders, says her
neighbour Clara, another maid servant. Being unmarried and living
in a joint family where there are more earning members and a
prosperous brother who sends sums like Rs 1,000 from time to
time, the going rate is higher.
When burglars broke into her dwelling place in the slum and took
away all her vessels and clothes, Vasantha was told no FIR could
be filed unless she paid Rs. 300 first. "Ethana panam kondu
vandirukke?" (how much money have you brought?) is the first
question we are asked so we don't even bother to report thefts
anymore," said Rosy and Kamala who were her neighbours in the
hovels along the Cooum for a while and then returned to their
village unable to continue life in the city.
Alice spoke of the daily battering her doors received at the
hands of drunken men demanding sexual favours just because they
believed they could get away with it when a single woman lived
with only her old mother for company.
And Mary, another abandoned woman with three sons who worked for
me a couple of years, never failed to emphasise the fact that
though poor, she worked hard and didn't stray from the straight
and narrow path, managing always to imply, not so subtly, that it
was my duty to reward virtue as often as possible with whatever
she needed.
Other servants were instructed not to inform me that she often
took money from me for something that she was already getting
free from the Government or the municipal corporation, like tiles
to replace the ones that the cyclone had blown away, for
instance.
Does one burn with the anger caused by the discovery of such
exploitation or curse the helplessness of poverty compounded by
the pressures of surviving in a system so entrenched in
corruption that any well-meaning measure to alleviate it is
choked immediately?
Recent papers report that a woman in her twenties had to stagger
out of the labour room to plead with her parents, "Please give
them (the ayahs) some money.
They are torturing me. They even hit me on the thighs." She then
delivered a baby boy, had to shell out another Rs. 150 and her
parents were warned by other new mothers that they would be
poorer by at least another Rs. 1,500 before their daughter and
grandchild were discharged.
The fleecing by ayahs, wardboys and liftmen is not a new
phenomenon and periodical inspections and inquiries do not seem
to stem the rot effectively.
Officials turn a blind eye to avoid confrontation and the public
continue to pay a heavy price.
Raji, who works as a masseuse, complains how nurses in public and
private hospitals catering to lower income groups, do not even
divulge the gender of newborns unless they are tipped heavily.
A sidelight on the issue is that when a boy is born, more money
has to be parted with than in the 'tragic event' of a girl's
entry into the family.
I have personally experienced anger and frustration in the
poshest of medical centres, where before wheeling in a family
member after serious surgery, wardboys pause meaningfully at the
door to collect their tips, and only then transfer the patient to
the bed. Even in the darkest hours of medical crises, one is
expected to have change in all denominations at hand to disperse
liberally to the minions whose co-operation is required for
smooth passage in hospitals of all types.
My friend can never forget that an hour before her father
breathed his last, she had to get down on her hands and knees to
wipe the bathroom floor whose wetness could cause a fall and
endanger patients further - the ayah whom she approached said she
was required to do it only twice a day. When I told the staff of
a well-known orthopaedist's clinic that the floor at the entrance
was wet, the roomful of patients with broken bones was not enough
reason for them to break the chain of command: it was still wet
when I left half an hour later.
Just one day's readers' mail on civic problems (in newspapers)
lists several problems and some solutions - the footpath on
either side of the Saidapet subway on the market end is occupied
by vegetable and fruit vendors causing great hardship to the
public amid the jostling crowds in the limited space while an
adjacent market complex built recently lies unused; erratic power
supply in the Avadi area interrupts everything, from household
work and children's study/homework to entertainment and mosquito-
free sleep and rest: hardships of commuters in the Perambur area;
the unreliable telephone service in Virugambakkam; the total lack
of maintenance of the Mylapore crematorium in contrast to the one
in Gujarat, well-maintained with beautiful trees and plants that
the reader had admired.
Most readers will have several similar plaints to add about the
problems of daily living in other areas but isn't it high time
citizens organised themselves better to demand better service and
maintenance of public places and authorities moved to function
more effectively?
Power corrupts the few while weakness corrupts the many, goes the
saying, but power and weakness together seem to have reduced life
to an obstacle race in a city festering with garbage mounds,
rotten rice, dry taps and the 'baksheesh' culture that
shamelessly requires constant rewards even for the performance of
duly-assigned duties.
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