Delhi NGOs, Cops Lock
Horns over Beggars
When
16-year-old Manoj recited his poem "Kangalistan ke kangle
hum sab... (We are the beggars of this beggar nation)", all
his listeners sympathised. But that was where the meeting of minds
at a workshop in the Indian capital on the problems impoverished
beggars face, and pose, ended. The authorities and NGOs had totally
different views on tackling the situation.
Activists
flayed the police for outlawing begging at traffic intersections,
but the authorities insisted the move was important not just to
ensure the smooth flow of vehicles but to break the backs of criminal
gangs behind the beggar network.
There
are no new estimates of how many people in India, specifically
this city of 15 million people, live off begging. The last figure
was released in 1983, when a professor in Delhi University's Law
Faculty estimated there were 1.01 million beggars in the country.
NGO
representatives at the workshop said beggars were a distressed
lot, compelled to migrate to this city from other states in search
of a living. Said Sanjay Gupta, an activist with Childhood Enhancement
through Training and Action (Chetna): "Begging is one of
the responses of acute poverty. People are not born beggars and
do not become so by taking alms, but are victims of lack of employment
opportunities in rural and urban areas. "They are often incapable
of working because of old age and physical handicap. Before beginning
to solve this problem with strict anti-poverty laws, the government
should modify its policies and schemes."
Added
Indu Prakash Singh, the director of Ashray Adhikaar Abhiyan that
has been fighting for the rights of beggars: "A study by
the Centre for Media Studies (a Delhi-based research group) pegs
a beggar's average earnings at about Rs 50 a day on the basis
of statements of over 60 percent of beggars interviewed.
"Do
not call them beggars -- they are distressed people. Decriminalising
begging will help in addressing the root cause. People do not
beg out of choice, but out of compulsion." Singh claimed
the police belief that beggars on Delhi streets were puppets in
the hands of crime syndicates was unfounded.
"A
recent study by Delhi policeman Prakash Srivastava totally denied
any role of the mafia operating behind begging in Delhi. How can
the government say it is an organised crime?"
But
Maxwell Pereira, the joint commissioner of police in charge of
traffic, said: "There are several active gangs operating
in Delhi. It has come to our notice that 500 people are brought
in every year into Delhi from outside for this purpose."
NGOs
were up in arms earlier this year when the traffic police announced
that motorists and commuters giving alms to beggars or buying
goods from vendors at traffic intersections would be fined.
B
B Pande, the law professor who had conducted the 1983 survey on
beggars, said as many as seven criminal gangs organised begging
in this city.
Another
point of criticism at the workshop was the situation arising from
the extension of the Bombay Prevention of Begging Act (BPBA) to
Delhi. Under the law, begging, vending on roads, cleaning vehicles
at traffic junctions, singing in buses and displaying disability
for alms are all unlawful.
Anybody
penalised under this law is sent to a special beggar court and
bailed out only after paying between Rs 500 and Rs 1,000. Both
activists and NGOs agreed this was doing little good. "In
spite of the law, only two percent of the people caught are convicted
in Delhi. Do we need such a rule?" asked K J R Burman, joint
director of the social welfare department.
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