“The
first time a bulldozer came to our place, I was scared and kept
sitting near our belongings that had been thrown out,” says Roshni,
a ten year old whose family migrated from Bihar to Delhi looking for
employment. Roshni and her family have been living in a slum in
Yamuna Khadar’s Belagaon in the capital’s eastern region. The
settlement is right behind Rajghat, the memorial dedicated to Mahatma
Gandhi. Between 2011 and 2018, the houses and the small farms of the
dwellers had to face frequent eviction drives by the Delhi
Development Authority (DDA).
Children in these fragile
communities are amongst the worst hit by slum demolitions. They miss
out on education, dropping out of school due to homelessness,
uncertainty, and the stigma they face in schools as “slum
children”. Caught in a cycle of poverty and growing up with the
violence of forced displacement, their future is one of unemployment
or poorly paid jobs, not to mention underage labour.
Lakshya
Aakriti Foundation (LAF), a not-for-profit, runs informal schools for
them in Belagaon because often having to shift from one place to
another severely hampers schooling. Diptesh Singh of LAF explains,
“We have been associated with this place since 2012. The area faces
around four demolitions per year. One demolition takes place in a
staggered manner over several days. So for the entire period the
families, including the children, stay around their homes in case the
bulldozers return. And it is not as if children’s school calendar
is taken into consideration when homes are demolished. Children end
up missing many days of school at a stretch or dropping out
altogether.”
Children of Belagaon attending a school run by LAF
This
year Roshni saw DDA officials in her area again. But this time she
was quick to act: “I carefully dismantled our makeshift home,
carried the lighter things outside the house with my younger brother,
called up my older brother, and waited for him to come and take the
heavy stuff out.”
Despite
the trauma associated with demolitions, some children feel it is
better to stay on and claim their rights to the land their ancestors
have lived on since before Independence. Being close to the Yamuna
river, the area is different from most urban slums in its greenery
and fertility, and many residents depend on farming for their
livelihood. Abdul and Rohit, both about 13 years old, are friends
reluctant to shift to another locality. Abdul explains: “There is
open space for us to play cricket. Neighbours share fresh vegetables
they grow.” But he rues the fact that it takes months for families
to get back to farming after bulldozers have run over their crops.
When the JCB machines come to
raze the houses to the ground, Abbas, 14, feels like “hitting those
people till they run away”. “It would be so good if we can retain
this land. Anywhere else we will have to pay rent, and buy cooking
gas, while here we can use the wood available around.”
Abbas’s
father, Shafiq, has an elder son who works in another city as a shop
assistant. With the family facing either homelessness or the threat
of it, the son had given up on education years ago. Being illiterate
himself, Shafiq wants that at least Abbas should study well. In
answer to a question about the line of work he wants to pursue later
in life, Abbas replies with a blank eyed stare, “I’ll become
whatever is written in my destiny.”
Constant
displacement has made him lose faith in the surety of anything and he
believes that fate would decide his future.
With
their right to housing taken away, children lose out on the right to
education too
Sunayna
Wadhwan has been an activist with organisations like Hazards Centre
and Mobile Creches. In her experience of working with communities in
slum clusters, she noticed many families don’t send children to
schools so the kids can call and inform the parents if a demolition
drive seems imminent: “When we conducted meetings, children would
join and try to learn about what the future of their homes would be.
Those who go to schools are often discriminated against. The school
authorities feel these children won’t be able to stay in one area
consistently and are reluctant to take them in. Once admitted, they
have to face social stigma, like being made to sit on the last seats
of the bus, because of living in slums.
The
proportion of students in higher education from such localities is
low. A common trend for those who do study is to get enrolled for
open or correspondence courses once they reach the college level.
They realise that a college degree can be helpful in getting them
jobs, especially through NGOs active in their area.”
Working
with the Centre for Policy Research (CPR), Mukta Naik is an
urban planner and architect. Remembering an incident of relocation of
a community, she says, “The shifting took place close to children's
board exams [considered a crucial test in an Indian child's school
life]. Some children ended up losing the documents needed to appear
for the examination.”
Resettlement also affects
livelihood. Women working as domestic workers within the city are not
able to find opportunities in the far flung areas where they are
resettled. This affects the amount of spending on children's
education, whether it’s about admission to a new school or
traveling to attend the old one. The minute it becomes a question of
a long commute, girls are made to drop out even quicker because of
safety concerns. Sometimes they stay back to take care of the house
or siblings, without being safe themselves in the cut-off areas they
have been moved to.
Evictions also lead to
absenteeism because there is so much damage to property that every
member pitches in to put the household together. Children lose
uniforms, bags and books. At a time when they have been rendered
homeless, parents find it difficult to buy these things.
Rights
groups say slum evictions make children vulnerable to violence,
trauma and neglect
For the teacher in the school
run by LAF in Belagaon, absenteeism is a regular concern. Once
evictions/demolitions start occurring at regular intervals, children
start dropping out. He says, “These children have to live in the
constant fear of getting uprooted.” Shivani Chaudhry of Housing and
Land Rights' Network, an NGO, recalls meeting a boy who broke down
and started crying each time he saw a bulldozer. Demolition drives in
Delhi’s slums have led to some children getting injured and others
getting killed.
“The
city sees adolescents in slums as potential abusers. But what about
the tacit violence these children live with?” asks Enakshi Ganguly
of HAQ Centre for Child Rights. “They grow up seeing their parents
getting beaten up for fighting for their rights. The threat of
children getting abused increases when resettlement takes place in
remote areas and the jobs parents get closer to the city keep them
out all day. Children are left to fend for themselves.”
Nazdeek is an NGO fighting for
the rights of communities in slums. Jayshree Satpute, Nazdeek’s
co-founder and lawyer, talks about litigation’s role in helping
eviction affected people, “When the court comes up with a
favourable order, like ordering authorities to make anganwadis (day
care centres) for children, it happens after a year or so but also
with results like two centres being close to each other, rather than
in different localities.”
The
staff of these anganwadis are also not motivated. They have been
fighting for better wages and recognition as government employees,
and not volunteers. Working in slums is not lucrative because they
get incentives if children have regular attendance. “In an area
facing forced migration, this regularity takes a toll,” Jayshree
adds.
Bipin
Rai is a member of the Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board (DUSIB),
a government body in charge of looking after slum clusters and their
resettlement. He says, “Evictions are not legal. That is why we
resettle and rehabilitate. But DDA and the Central Public Works
Department do not cooperate or partner with us when it comes to land
under them.”
However,
like Rai admits, DUSIB too is not directly engaged with looking after
the social aspects but is involved more in the infrastructure of
resettlement colonies. Sudeshna Chhatterjee is the CEO of a trust
called Action for Children’s Environments. In her paper ‘Children’s
Role in Humanizing Forced Evictions and Resettlements in Delhi’,
she describes the active participation of children in resisting the
Gautampuri evictions in the year 2000. It had brought to attention
children’s problems and gained them greater participatory space.
But to look after the complete social, educational and psychological
well being of children facing displacement, special focus on children
in city planning for changes to be made at the policy level is
something urban planners, researchers and activists continue to
advocate for.
India
has ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the
Child. But in the current Draft National Child Protection Policy
framed by the Ministry of Women and Child Development, the mention of
children in vulnerable circumstances, like those exposed to evictions
or forced migration, remains missing. This gap reaffirms
lawyer-activist Jayshree Satpute’s statement, “The elite
classes want every opportunity for their children. But they don’t
extend the same principles to other classes.” CPR’s
Mukta Naik has something similar to say, “The
Delhi Development Authority's perception of the city is elitist . .
. and slum children have no place in this vision.”
(Names of children have
been changed to protect identities.)
Firs published in Beyond Headlines, 31 Jan 2019.
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