Skip to main content

Critical learning from Delhi riots: No amount of relief can compensate for the blood lost

By Dr Lubna Sayed Qadri*
I have not visited the affected places of Delhi riots yet. The migrants mainly inhabit the area. Around 4,500 stand displaced. Being part of several groups, I have been getting live feedback from day one.
Speaking over with hundreds of volunteers, doctors, lawyers, psychologists, donors, political activists, civil society organisations (CSOs) and affected citizens, I have been doing background work on mobilising supplies, which I have been doing for the past two weeks.
Here is what I gather.
The attacks were strategic. It is easy to quell riots by imposing a curfew within a few hours, it doesn't take three days. The mob attacked the people, property, businesses, which eventually left survivors displaced. When people are internally displaced without identity documents, you know their fate!
On day two, around 2:30 am, we were confronted with the fact that goons were not letting in injured in ambulances at the Al-Hind hospital, where electricity was cut, and gun-shots were heard. Some people were continuously tracking tweets and reporting them to the police as fake news.
I do have a dormant Twitter account, and when a rare user like me was threatened for a simple tweet, you know how widespread the monitoring was! Anyway, I took down my tweet in less than 10 minutes.
People donated generously -- many collection points were oversupplied with eatables, medicine, clothes, bedding, sanitary stuff, baby food, and what not. People, irrespective of their faith, are still contributing.
Many injured or hit by bullets did not go to the hospitals to hide their identity, hence avoided any threat from the state. Psychiatrists, meanwhile, have managed to convince many of them to undergo treatment.
I approached a couple of charities mandated to do relief work. They helped in personal capacities and excused any help at the organisational level. Which points to the fact that the charities are run by religious minorities are fearful of offering support.
Since the issue is political, some organisations offered help, while othera preferred to stay at bay. Volunteers along with local administration are trying to rehabilitate people now -- they are being provided with home kits. This exercise is assumed to help them start anew, and at the same time therapeutic, in times of distress. It will also ensure better water, sanitation and hygien (WASH) provisions than in camps.
Trust deficit is high. There were cases where people refused to opt for government ambulances and requested for private. There were instances also where families refused relief when it came from the government and accepted when volunteers approached them.
Since this was a strategic attack on business, the priority should be to rehabilitate the affected by helping them set up small/big ventures for sustained income. That will defeat the purpose behind the attacks. A baseline survey is the need of the hour. Civil society volunteers are offering help. However, it should come from the government.
As for access to justice, one is not sure who and what ensures this component. Peaceful women-led protests were yet again turned violent by some notorious men. That brings me to the point that wars are mostly men-made.
Many unsung heroes are offering all the help and are on ground 24 x7. They are not on social media, claiming the credit. They happen to be donors, doctors, legal teams, therapists, some CSO members, activists, community members and an endless list of students -- one from Kashmir as well, who felt deeply traumatic, sought psychological help in between, but is working tirelessly.
---
*Social activist

Comments

Unknown said…
very good....approach.

TRENDING

Telangana government urged to stop 'unconstitutional' relocation of Chenchu tribes

By A Representative   The Nallamalla forests are witnessing a renewed surge of indigenous resistance as the Chenchu adivasis , a Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group (PVTG), have formally launched the Chenchu Solidarity Forum (CSF) on the eve of World Earth Day to combat what they describe as unlawful and forced relocation from the Amrabad Tiger Reserve . 

Kolkata dialogue flags policy and finance deficit in wetland sustainability

By A Representative   Wetlands were the focus of India–Germany climate talks in Kolkata, where experts from government, business, and civil society stressed both their ecological importance and the urgent need for stronger conservation frameworks. 

Dhandhuka violence: Gujarat minority group seeks judicial action, cites targeted arson

By A Representative   The Minority Coordination Committee (MCC) Gujarat has written to the Director General of Police seeking judicial action in connection with recent violence in Dhandhuka town of Ahmedabad district, alleging targeted attacks on properties belonging to members of the Muslim community following a fatal altercation between two bike riders on April 18.

Cracks in Gujarat model? Surat’s exodus reveals precarity behind prosperity claims

By Vidya Bhushan Rawat*   The return of migrant workers from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, particularly from Gujarat, was inevitable. Gujarat has long been showcased as the epitome of “infrastructure” and the business-friendly Modi model. Yet, when governments become business-friendly, they require the poor to serve them—while keeping them precarious, unable to stabilize, demand fair wages, or assert their rights. The agenda is clear: workers must remain grateful for whatever crumbs the Seth ji offers.  

'Fraudulent': Ex-civil servants urge President to halt Odisha tribal land dispossession

By A Representative   A collective of 81 retired civil servants from the Constitutional Conduct Group has written to the President of India expressing alarm over what they describe as the wrongful dispossession of tribal lands in Odisha’s Rayagada district. The letter, dated April 19, 2026, highlights violent clashes in Kantamal village where police personnel reportedly injured over 70 tribal residents attempting to protect their community rights. 

India 'violating international law obligations' over Israel ties: UN rapporteur

By A Representative   Francesca Albanese, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories, has alleged that India is “violating its obligations under international law” through its continued association with Israel, including defence ties and alleged arms exports during the ongoing conflict in Gaza.

Chromatographies of the self: Gender, labour, and resistance in Deepti Kushwah's verse

By Ravi Ranjan*  Any sensitive reader of contemporary Hindi poetry will find it impossible to overlook the eight poems by Deepti Kushwah recently published in Samalochan . This suite—comprising works such as ‘Ekākelī ābha’ (A Solitary Radiance), ‘Praśna mem camaktā huā’ (Glowing in the Question), and ‘Ek ankahī tapis’ (An Unspoken Heat)—constructs a multidimensional collage where colour transcends mere visual experience. 

The soundtrack of resistance: How 'Sada Sada Ya Nabi' is fueling the Iran war

​ By Syed Ali Mujtaba*  ​The Persian track “ Sada Sada Ya Nabi ye ” by Hossein Sotoodeh has taken the world by storm. This viral media has cut across linguistic barriers to achieve cult status, reaching over 10 million views. The electrifying music and passionate rendition by the Iranian singer have resonated across the globe, particularly as the high-intensity military conflict involving Iran entered its second month in March 2026.

Why Tamil Nadu, Periyar, and the Dravidian model aren't just regional phenomena

By Vidya Bhushan Rawat*  The election campaign in Tamil Nadu this season is strikingly different. The alliance led by the DMK is consistently referred to as the “ DMK alliance ,” not the “INDIA alliance.” This distinction is unsurprising given the state’s history: Tamil Nadu remains the only state to decisively reject “national” parties. The AIADMK’s surrender to the BJP after J. Jayalalithaa ’s death represents, in many ways, a betrayal of the politics of Tamil identity—an identity Periyar envisioned as Dravidian, not narrowly Tamil.