Diet of mud and despair in Indian village ....................
BBC News, Ganne, Uttar Pradesh
The World Bank estimates that one third of all the very poorest people in the world live in India, and stories like those from Ganne have now inspired a national Right To Food campaign.
"We live on a day-to-day basis," Suraj says, as the faint sound of hammering echoes across the village. "What we earn is what we spend on our families in a day."
In Ganne, just off the main road about an hour south of the city of Allahabad, this is a simple fact of life.
It is home to members of a poor tribal community, who live in small huts clustered around a series of shallow quarries.
Inside one of the huts sits a little girl called Poonam. She is three years old, and in the early stages of kidney failure.
Like many children in Ganne she has become used to eating bits of dried mud and silica, which she finds in the quarry. Tiny children chew on the mud simply because they are hungry - but it is making them ill.
When reports first emerged of children eating mud here local officials delivered more food and warned the villagers not to speak to outsiders. But Poonam's father, Bhulli, is close to despair.
What can I say," he shrugs. "We can't afford to eat properly, so how can I afford to buy medicines for her?"
"I am really worried about my daughter, but I don't know what to do next. The poor need the government's help - if we had it, we wouldn't be in such a desperate state."
People like Bhulli and Suraj make their money filling lorries with bits of rock. It takes about eight hours for five men to fill one load. They carry the stones up from the quarry in plastic washing-up bowls balanced on their heads.
One of the women in the village, Phulkari, approaches to tell us about her little boy.
"My son's name is Suraj, and he's started eating mud too," she says. "What can we do? We eat the mud from the quarry when we feel hungry."
"Where do we get the money?" she asks. "We usually eat food only once a day. Last night we went to bed without eating anything at all."
Official estimates are that right across the country 75% of subsidised grain does not make it to the intended target in villages like Ganne. In other words, the delivery system needs to be reformed as well - and corrupt local officials need to be taken to task. There is a long way to go. So, as the Indian economy continues to grow at impressive speed, in Ganne they continue to eat mud. And without finding a solution here in India, the world will come nowhere near the targets it has set itself for reducing global poverty.
Monday, May 17, 2010
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1 comment:
So this is what the BJP meant when it coined the slogan "India Shining" and the Congress coined the slogan "Garibi Hatao"
Three things to be done immediately.
1. Put a halt to our population growth.
2. Eradicate corruption in all spheres of life.
3. Stop the Pay Commission Awards that the government doles out to its employees as it sets in a fresh round of inflation. The government employees are not affected as they get DA but the common man who does not get DA suffers
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