lockdown impact
At least 3,000 migrant workers from different locations of the cities assemble at Bandra (West) railway station demanding railways to arrange trains or any other transport means to send them back to their homes.
The agitated migrant workers are not ready for lockdown extension till May 4 as they do not have food and money to survive.(Image: PTI)
- Migrant workers had arrived at the railway station expecting train service to resume
- This was the first time Maharashtra and Mumbai witnessed of this huge gathering during the virus outbreak after Delhi
Mumbai :After a couple of hours of the announcement of an extension of lockdown by Prime Minister Narendra Modi till 3 may,2020,thousands of migrant workers who earn daily wages in Mumbai came out on road on Tuesday afternoon nearly at 3.30 pm demanding transport arrangements to go back to their hometowns.
The workers, from Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, had arrived at the station expecting normal train services would resume at the end of a 21-day countrywide lockdown on Tuesday
“Migrant workers who gathered near Bandra station in Mumbai may have thought PM Modi had ordered opening of state borders," said Anil Deshmukh, Maharashtra’s home minister. He said that the crowd was later dispersed and the situation is under control.
The migrants demanded that they could not continue to live here away from their homes or families in different parts of India with the nationwide lockdown getting extended till May 3 on Tuesday. They asked the police to make arrangements for suitable transportation facilities to enable them to go to their respective towns and villages.
A large posse of police was on the site to bring the crowd under control even as videos of the incident went viral on social media. The Mumbai Police, which attempted to cajole them from gathering in such huge numbers, resorted to a mild lathi charge when sections of the restive crowd seemed to be going out of control.
Soon after the incident came to light, Maharashtra Tourism Minister Aaditya Thackeray blamed the Centre for the protest by hundreds of migrant workers near Bandra railway station and sought a road map to facilitate their journey back to their native places.
"The current situation at Bandra Station, now dispersed or even the rioting in Surat is a result of the Union Govt not being able to take a call on arranging a way back home for migrant labour. They don’t want food or shelter, they want to go back home," Aditya tweeted.
The current situation at Bandra Station, now dispersed or even the rioting in Surat is a result of the Union Govt not being able to take a call on arranging a way back home for migrant labour. They don’t want food or shelter, they want to go back home— Aaditya Thackeray (@AUThackeray) April 14, 2020
"Right from the day the trains have been shut down, the State had requested trains to run for 24 hours more so that migrant labour could go back home. CM Uddhav Thackeray ji raised this issue in the PM- CM Video Conf as well requesting a roadmap for migrant labour to reach home," he said.
Maharashtra CM Uddhav Thackeray is likely to address a press conference where he said to be talking about the plight of migrants who have started walking from Mumbai, Pune and other big cities to their homes in other parts of Maharashtra as well as other states of the country amid the ongoing COVID-19 lockdown.
Meanwhile, Union Home Minister Amit Shah called Uddhav Thackeray and expressed concern over the Bandra gathering. Shah stressed that such events weaken India’s fight against Coronavirus and said that administration needs to stay vigilant to avoid such incidents. He also offered his full support to Maharashtra government to tackle the issue.
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