Delhi’s Homeless Still Await Adequate Living Conditions
Justice Delayed, Justice
Denied:
Delhi’s Homeless Still
Await Adequate Living Conditions
29 May 2012, New Delhi: In a press conference organised by Shahri
Adhikar Manch: Begharon Ke Saath (SAM:BKS) in the capital today, human
rights activists and homeless citizens raised several issues of concern related
to homelessness in Delhi.
Indu Prakash Singh, SAM:BKS member and
technical advisor at Indo-Global Social Service Society, provided an overview
of the situation of homelessness, including recent positive developments such
as the President of India’s announcement of a National Programme for Urban Homelessness, the National Advisory
Council’s recommendations for the homeless, and progressive orders from the
Hon’ble High Court of Delhi and the Supreme Court of India. In spite of these
developments, the Delhi government has failed to respond to the needs of the
city’s over 150,000 homeless people. He said, “Despite announcing plans to
improve living conditions in shelters, Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board
(DUSIB) has not taken appropriate action to date. This delayed response amounts
to a gross violation of a bundle of human rights of the homeless whom we call
CityMakers, as the city is built on their sweat, labour and subsidised services.”
He mentioned the, “preposterous plan of the Delhi Development Authority (DDA)
to amend Master Plan Delhi-2021 to reduce the number of homeless shelters from
one per one lakh population to one per five lakh population. This would reduce
the requirement of 160 permanent shelters in Delhi to 32 shelters and is in
direct violation of court orders.”
Ashok Pandey from Beghar Mazdoor
Sangharsh Samiti, also a SAM:BKS member, described the grossly inadequate
living conditions in the temporary shelters. Constructed for the winter, these
tin shelters, which were like cold storage boxes have become virtual ovens in
the summer and are largely
uninhabitable. “There is still no drinking water, toilets or fans in any
of the tent and tin shelters. Without electricity, how can any fans or lights be
installed? The heat is unbearable, people cannot sleep at night. Our shelter in
Kudusiya Ghat is infested with an army of mosquitoes. You can’t stand for a
minute without being bitten. This is an acute health hazard for the homeless,
especially for children who are most vulnerable,” he said. Ishwar Chand, another SAM:BKS member, added, “The absence of water
and sanitation facilities poses acute problems for homeless women and children
and threatens their security. Mobile health vans, despite High Court orders, do
not visit most of the shelters.”
Abdul Shakeel, member of SAM:BKS and
Haq, drew attention to the struggle of homeless citizens in Delhi for ration
cards and adequate grain entitlements under the Public Distribution System (PDS),
which they are consistently denied. Establishing their identity is a critical
issue for the homeless. He stated that, “The failure of the state to provide
the homeless with voter identity cards violates their right to political
participation.” He highlighted the economic burden faced due to DUSIB’s
consistent late payment to caretakers of shelters, many of whom are homeless
citizens. He also spoke of recent forced evictions carried out by the Delhi
government at Chilla Khadar and Baljeet Nagar, “which are resulting in more and
more people becoming homeless in Delhi.”
Zubeida, a woman who was
rendered homeless after being evicted from Viklang Basti before the
Commonwealth Games, spoke about the acute problems that her family has had to
face. “The government demolished our homes without any notice and did not
provide us with any alternative housing or compensation. We are now forced to
live on the streets without any shelter, basic services, privacy or security.
We have no one to approach or no means to seek justice in this city. The city
does not seem to care about the poor.”
SAM:BKS
member and associate director of Housing and Land Rights Network, Shivani Chaudhry, stated that, “Both the
High Court of Delhi and the Supreme Court of India have, in several interim
orders, called for the construction of sufficient and adequate permanent
shelters for the homeless. The High Court had asked the government for a
long-term plan and called for permanent shelters to be set up by December 2010.
A year and a half later, the government is still focusing on makeshift,
dysfunctional temporary shelters, that too at a cost of Rs. 3,00,000 per
shelter. We are extremely concerned about the attempts of the Delhi government
to further marginalise the homeless by proposing plans to relocate them to the
outskirts of the city in areas such as Kanjhawla and Narela. This would violate
not just their right to housing but also their right to work/livelihood. The
government’s repeated abrogation of its legal obligations to implement court
orders and uphold the Constitution of India and international law, is
disturbing.” She further added that,
“Providing shelters is just the first step in a continuum of housing rights;
the ultimate goal of the government must be to provide low cost, adequate
housing for the homeless.”
Amita Joseph, SAM:BKS member and
director of Business and Community Foundation, regretted that despite the
existence of a Joint Apex Advisory Committee (JAAC), a Mother NGO (MNGO) and positive
orders from the High Court of Delhi and the Supreme Court of India, the
condition of Delhi’s homeless has not improved significantly. Shahri Adhikar Manch had submitted to the
government a short-term plan (in February 2010) and a long-term plan (in
September 2011), with human rights-based recommendations, but these do not seem
to have been considered.
On
behalf of SAM:BKS, Ms Joseph presented the following demands from the
Government of Delhi:
-
Immediately
improve temporary shelters to make them habitable, including providing electricity,
fans, drinking water, toilets, healthcare, and mosquito repellants;
-
Establish
an independent committee to monitor the functioning of all homeless shelters;
-
Conduct
an audit into the expenditure of the government on temporary shelters, and provide
information on the process of design selection and contractors, and details on exact
spending;
-
Implement
the orders of the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India and High Court of Delhi,
especially related to creating year-round,
twenty-four hour permanent shelters
(160 shelters as per the requirement of one shelter per one lakh population)
and preparing a long-term plan for addressing
homelessness in Delhi;
-
Make
available vacant government buildings and unused premises for homeless
shelters;
-
Withdraw
the proposal of the DDA to amend the Master Plan Delhi-2021 to reduce the
number of homeless shelters from one per one lakh population to one per five
lakh population;
-
Conduct
regular meetings of the Joint Apex Advisory Committee and implement its
decisions; and,
-
Prevent
forced evictions that violate the right to adequate housing and result in
homelessness.
Speakers
stressed their commitment to working constructively with all agencies in order
to ensure that the human right to adequate housing of Delhi’s homeless is
protected. Delhi has the opportunity to be a model for other cities across
India with regard to providing services for the homeless and upholding their rights.
It is, therefore, crucial for the government to adopt a positive rather than an
adversarial approach and fulfill its national and international legal
obligations.
For more information, please contact:
Indu
Prakash Singh (9911362925); Ashok Pandey (9716436605);
Bipin
Rai (9999046469); Shivani Chaudhry (9818 205234)
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