Delhi must host the Games, but why must Dolly live in filth?

More than 300 flood-hit families have been relocated temporarily in tents near the Trilokpuri naalah

danish

Danish Raza | September 28, 2010


The evacuees have to deal with the stench from the drain apart from mosquitoes and shortage of drinking water
The evacuees have to deal with the stench from the drain apart from mosquitoes and shortage of drinking water

Dolly does not like her new home - a makeshift tent near the Trilokpuri drain in East Delhi. The stench from the drain - hardly five feet away from where she lives - turns her stomach. Mosquitoes buzz, bite and thrive here.  Mosquito bites dot her body. The five-year-old has not bathed for three days because her mother says that the limited water they get has to be used for other purposes.

Dolly used to live in the Yamuna catchment area with her parents, both farmers. Earlier this month, when the water level in the river rose above the danger mark, more than three hundred families were relocated by the Delhi authorities to the tents erected along the U.P. Link road.

Five days ago, the cops asked them to shift to tents near the open sewer drain.

“They said that we should not go anywhere near the Yamuna till the Commonwealth Games are over,” says 25-year-old Santosh.

A native of Ghazipur district in Uttar Pradesh, Santosh has no work to do till the Games. He kills time chatting with fellow farmers and playing cards. “Thank God they are providing us with food twice a day.”

However, there is no fixed time when the food - cooked rice and a vegetable - is distributed in the tents. Asha, 8, gets her first meal at 12 noon. “Without giving her food, I cannot expect her to do any household work,” says Parvati, Asha’s mother.

Her son, Anuj, 5, has been down with fever for the past two days. “There is dirty water all over. There are goats, buffaloes and even stray dogs outside our tents. How do you expect our children to stay healthy here?” asks the mother.

Jai Prakash, 18, informs that once they were given rotten food. “When I complained, they said that eat this first, and then a doctor will attend to you.”

Tents are spread over a kilometre-long stretch. Delhi Jal Board tankers are stationed at both ends of the stretch.

“The lack of potable water is the biggest problem we face here. These tankers are empty by noon time. After that, if someone needs water, he has to ask for it from the neighbouring tent,” says Jai Prakash, adding that the government could have shifted them to a better site.

He does not know if the government will allow him and other families to go back to the Yamuna catchment area once the Games are over. “It is government’s will. We really cannot say,” he sighs.


 

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