Skip to main content

Gujarat govt attitude towards non-Gujarati migrants 'parochial': PIL in High Court

By A Representative
A division bench of the Gujarat High Court consisting of Justices JB Pardiwala and SH Vora on Thursday heard a public interest litigation (PIL) seeking directions for the state government to ferry stranded migrant workers free of cost, insisting, they should not be compelled to pay “thousands of rupees” as ticket fares.
Senior advocate Anand Yagnik, appearing for the PIL filed by Congress MLA from Dasada Naushad Solanki, said, anywhere between 25 and 35 lakh inter-state migrant workers were stranded in Gujarat, and private luxury buses were charging between 2,000 and 20,000 per person as transporting charges, regretting the government was also collecting fare charges to send migrant workers by trains.
Yagnik said, “travelling” or “displacement allowance” was the responsibility of the principal employer, failing which, it becomes the responsibility, particularly during lockdown, of the Gujarat government to bear all the expenditure for the transportation of migrant workers.
He said, about 8,500 ST buses and about 35,000 drivers, conductors and other technical staff, who are paid salaries from the state exchequer, but they are currently unable to perform their normal obligations.
However, he regretted, while the ST buses have been used to bring back Gujarati students from Rajasthan, Karnataka, Maharashtra and elsewhere, as also Gujarati pilgrims stranded in Haridwar, Rishikesh, Vrindavan and Varanasi, the government is resorting to “blatant discrimination” towards non-Gujarati migrant workers and are not using ST buses for them.
Yagnik said 900 ST buses were used to bring back about 35,000 Gujarati migrant workers back to Saurashtra from Surat, insisting, Gujarat should stop being parochial and start using its more than 8,500 buses to ferry migrants and speed up transporting inter-state migrant workers facing pathetic conditions and hunger due to the lockdown.
Simultaneously taking up the cause of “more than 2.5 lakh inter-state migrant workers working in thousands of brick kiln units across the state, even as paying “pay attention to basic necessities of thousands of salt pan workers working in the Little Rann of Kutch”, Yagnik said, their plight continues to remain “unnoticed”.
Seeking court intervention to pay per person Rs 1,000 to each family member of 6.5 lakh construction workers immediately, Yagnik said, the current amount being paid, Rs 1,000 per family based on ration card, is “absolutely illogical.”
The High Court bench simultaneously heard other related petitions seeking an order calling upon private hospitals not to charge for the treatment of Covid-19 an amount more than that is charged in government hospitals; ensure adequate arrangement of beds in SVP and Civil hospitals of Ahmedabad; direct the government not to reduce number of testings per day; and begin collaborating with civil society.

Comments

TRENDING

Neville Cardus: The man who turned cricket writing into poetry

By Harsh Thakor*  Neville Cardus was one of the most remarkable literary figures of the twentieth century. A prolific English writer and critic, he achieved distinction in two vastly different fields: cricket and classical music. Entirely self-taught, Cardus rose from humble beginnings to become both the cricket correspondent and chief music critic of The Manchester Guardian . His achievements in these contrasting disciplines earned him widespread acclaim and established him as one of the foremost critics of his generation. In February 2025, the cricketing and literary world marked the fiftieth anniversary of his death, which occurred in February 1975.

Swami Vivekananda's views on caste and sexuality were 'painfully' regressive

By Bhaskar Sur* Swami Vivekananda now belongs more to the modern Hindu mythology than reality. It makes a daunting job to discover the real human being who knew unemployment, humiliation of losing a teaching job for 'incompetence', longed in vain for the bliss of a happy conjugal life only to suffer the consequent frustration.

The politics of dreaming: Savita Singh's feminist imagination

By Ravi Ranjan*  In contemporary Hindi poetry, few voices have explored the philosophical and creative possibilities of women's experience as powerfully as Savita Singh. Across collections such as "Svapna Samay" (Dream Time), Aapne Jaisa Jeevan, and "Prem Bhi Ek Yatana" Hai, she has developed a poetic world in which woman is not merely a subject of suffering or social commentary but a creator of knowledge, meaning, and alternative realities.