Archive for the ‘Migrant Crisis’ Category

Sunday Long Reads: The legacy of Pandit Jasraj, the struggle of working urban women in lockdown, and more – The Indian Express

New Delhi | Updated: August 23, 2020 7:29:30 pm

The struggle of working urban women to strike a fine balance at home and work during the pandemic

Amrita Mahale was about five months pregnant when the first lockdown was announced on March 22. Overnight, her doctor shut her clinic, medicines became harder to find, and the bustling city of Mumbai, at the heart of her acclaimed debut novel, Milk Teeth (2018), became an unfamiliar place, haunted by a pandemic that had the world in its death grip. While she wrote on the weekends, it was her job as a product manager at a non-profit AI-for-social-good innovation lab that took up most of her time. Only a week ago, the lab had started a work-from-home trial. Her husband, who runs an education startup, too, had to move to online lessons, making a part of the house out of bounds for most of the day. Suddenly, Mahale, 35, found her world shrinking into her apartment in Bandra. I am not great at multitasking, and I find switching contexts frequently quite hard, so I need proper separation between work and writing. I found myself sinking into deep anxiety. I was checking the rising COVID numbers obsessively and closely following the migrant crisis with a growing sense of despondency. Its impossible to not question your decision to bring a new life into a world that seems to be falling apart. Pregnant women are a high-risk group for COVID, so I stopped leaving the house entirely, which wasnt great for my mental health, says Mahale, whose son was born a month ago. It was a surreal experience, she says; not even her parents were allowed to visit her in the hospital.

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How different types of discrimination can overlap in our identities

COVID-19 has been a time of reckoning as we come face to face with the injustices that have created structural inequality at so many levels. It could be the plight of the urban labourers as they trudged back to their villages, traversing hundreds of miles, rejected by the very people who used them mercilessly while they could. Ours is the society that turned its eyes away from the predicament of millions of street children and women who were made more vulnerable in abusive homes. Globally, the #BlackLivesMatter movement became even more significant with the stark contrast of racial discrimination in the COVID-19 deaths. People are taking to the streets to protest as centuries of cruelty continues to be called out. The present times are like X-ray (a metaphor used by the activist Arundhati Roy) exposing the fault lines of a society built on indifference and injustice.

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What Pandit Jasraj taught us about becoming one with the divine

Marina Ahmad, one of the seven students of Pandit Jasraj whom he considered his fondest and closest of chelas (disciples), is a proud New Yorker. She also maintains homes in Mumbai and Dhaka. A nomad at heart, she travels the world without fear and at the drop of a hat. She brings India, Pandit Jasraj and his peerless, soul-stirring music with her wherever she lands. Music so pure and rich, it heals and inspires most deeply.

Marina was born to Faqueer Shahabuddin Ahmad and Ayesha Akhtar of Dhaka. Ahmad was the first attorney general of Bangladesh. Ayesha was his wife and mother of their seven children. Music was in their blood, but law was the ancestral vocation followed with pride. Even so, Marina was encouraged from a young age to explore and professionalise her singing.

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A wonderfully atmospheric Perry Mason reboot

Perry Mason regarded her with calm appraisal, as though considering just what sort of an impression she would make on the witness stand. Tell me more, Thelma, he said. I was out with a boyfriend, she told him. The mask of patient tranquillity dropped from Mason (1934, The Case Of The Lucky Legs by Erle Stanley Gardner). For those familiar with the pulpy, grungy universe of Gardner, the bestselling author whose fictional lawyer Perry Mason solved practically every case he took on, with a mix of sleuthing acumen and slick courtroom moves, these lines would evoke instant nostalgia. Each case (Gardner was prolific and wrote more than 80 novels and short stories) held out the promise of a juicy mystery full of dodgy characters, confusing red herrings and an end blazing with clarity, where Mason exonerated the innocent and got the guilty to confess.

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Raqs Media Collective: We have been questioning the boundaries of knowledge and art

The Yokohama Triennale is one of the first major art events to take place after a spate of cancellations due to the Covid-19 pandemic. In the curatorialnote you mention how Afterglow (the title) lights up an awareness of what it means to keep making art in the twenty-first century. If you could please elaborate.

The Yokohama Triennale 2020 opened on July 17, with every precaution in place, and with protocols for how visitors can be within the exhibition so as to minimise chances of contact. The opening signals to the world that art is there to think with everyone in this moment, to invite all to activate the imagination, and to be with thought, desire, and insight into care and contagion.

The Yokohama Triennale Committee, along with us (Artistic Directors) and the curatorial and production teams, had arrived at an understanding that it was possible to install the exhibition and keep it open. It is also our understanding that, almost a decade ago, the Yokohama Triennale 2011, which had opened after the tsunami and the Fukushima nuclear accident, had had an increased turnout. People had turned to art as a source of renewal and solidarity. This time too feels connected to something deeper. It has only been a week since the exhibition has opened, but the initial response from the public, press, and artists to the Triennale has been extremely heart-warming and exhilarating.

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Are software algorithms racist and sexist?

AI, Aint I a Woman?Today we pose this question to new powersas faces increment scars/ Old burns, new urns, collecting data, chronicling our past/ Often forgetting to deal with gender, race and class.

When Joy Buolamwini, a Ghanaian-American poet and research assistant at MIT Media Lab, Massachusetts, the US, chanted this spoken-word piece in 2018, inspired by African-American womens rights activist Sojourner Truths Aint I a Woman? speech from 1851, she was voicing her research findings for the masses. The piece (on YouTube) spoke of what she discovered racial bias in the facial-recognition software created by Amazon, Google, IBM and Microsoft, among others. These either didnt recognise people of colour accurately or didnt register them at all. Or, acknowledged women as men even former US first lady Michelle Obama, actor Oprah Winfrey, tennis player Serena Williams were not spared. Buolamwini was baffled when on wearing a white theatre mask she cleared recognition. With Timnit Gebru of Microsoft Research, she put together a paper on the flaws of algorithms. Her organisation Algorithmic Justice Leagues efforts have now led cities like San Francisco, Oakland, Somerville to pass laws to ban government use of any controversial facial-recognition technology. Last month, the Massachusetts Senate approved a bill to halt law enforcements use of facial recognition.

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The ethical treatment of plants

Theres an increasing number of people who are hectoring the world about our abominable treatment of animals, especially those bred and farmed for food and they try very hard to make these people give up steaks and smoked ham and eat leaves instead. Many of their criticisms are valid and we ought to be more humane in our dealings with them (though doing so while killing something might seem paradoxical). Ah, yes, and now here comes the but!

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Sunday Long Reads: The legacy of Pandit Jasraj, the struggle of working urban women in lockdown, and more - The Indian Express

The struggle of working urban women to strike a fine balance at home and work during the pandemic – The Indian Express

Written by Paromita Chakrabarti | Updated: August 23, 2020 10:42:48 amIllustration: Suvajit Dey

Amrita Mahale was about five months pregnant when the first lockdown was announced on March 22. Overnight, her doctor shut her clinic, medicines became harder to find, and the bustling city of Mumbai, at the heart of her acclaimed debut novel, Milk Teeth (2018), became an unfamiliar place, haunted by a pandemic that had the world in its death grip. While she wrote on the weekends, it was her job as a product manager at a non-profit AI-for-social-good innovation lab that took up most of her time. Only a week ago, the lab had started a work-from-home trial. Her husband, who runs an education startup, too, had to move to online lessons, making a part of the house out of bounds for most of the day. Suddenly, Mahale, 35, found her world shrinking into her apartment in Bandra. I am not great at multitasking, and I find switching contexts frequently quite hard, so I need proper separation between work and writing. I found myself sinking into deep anxiety. I was checking the rising COVID numbers obsessively and closely following the migrant crisis with a growing sense of despondency. Its impossible to not question your decision to bring a new life into a world that seems to be falling apart. Pregnant women are a high-risk group for COVID, so I stopped leaving the house entirely, which wasnt great for my mental health, says Mahale, whose son was born a month ago. It was a surreal experience, she says; not even her parents were allowed to visit her in the hospital.

As the COVID-19 upends lives across the world, a disproportionate amount of its toll has also fallen on the urban upper-middle-class working women. In addition to their professional duties, the burden of managing home and care work have grown. In India, which has one of the lowest female workforce participation rates in the world, of which only 20.4 per cent are urban women (source: 2018 Periodic Labour Force Survey, released by the NSSO last year), this has been aggravated by pre-existing inequalities in gender roles, the sudden absence of networks that facilitate their participation in the workforce, loss of jobs, salary cuts and the guilt of not doing enough. Even though they are a minority in the Indian labour force, the repercussions of the pandemic on the urban Indian working woman, despite her many privileges, have been significant.

A year ago, Madhuja Bandyopadhyay moved to Mumbai with her eight-year-old son, after a long stint as the senior vice-president of a leading Bengali entertainment channel in Kolkata, to work with a national entertainment channel. In the television industry, you get used to thinking on your feet. But, for the move, I wanted to ensure that everything was planned in advance. Given Mumbais distance, I made sure that my office, apartment, my sons school, daycare and after-school activity centres were all in one area so that it would make the commute less stressful. My mother and my husband (filmmaker Anindya Chattopadhyay) flew in from Kolkata frequently. The only thing I hadnt factored in was a pandemic, says Bandyopadhyay, 41.

Initially, like many others, Bandyopadhyay had hoped that the lockdown would be short-lived, but eventually, as work and lives shifted online, it was the distance from her family and anxiety over their well-being that got to her the most. I have only lived for about a year in this city and have just begun to know people. Suddenly, it felt like my life had come to a standstill. I felt incredibly lonely and wanted to see my husband, my mother, my friends and there was no way I could, says Bandyopadhyay, who took to long conference calls with family and close friends for a sense of community.

For Manu Gulati, mentor teacher with the directorate of education, Delhi government, the new normal required a completely new orientation. April marks the beginning of a new academic session in Delhi and that is the time when teachers require academic and pedagogic support the most. This year, though, the usual activity of the time was replaced by a sense of foreboding, and, later, preparation for a new kind of academic practice. The 37-year-old had always been interested in the intersection of technology and education; since the pandemic, together with a colleague, Rohit Upadhyaya, she has been conducting training workshops for teacher-development coordinators (TDCs) of Delhis government schools in effective use of social media for pedagogic support. The pandemic made technological intervention a matter of urgency. As daily virtual training sessions began for the TDCs, Gulatis days began, like always, at 6.30 am and stretched well into the night. A nine-member family living in an MIG flat is often pressed for space at the best of times, but now, with everyone working from home, creating quiet work corners was often an issue. Gulati says there were days when the house would go unswept or she would bristle at the sight of a sink overflowing with dishes, but, slowly, people learned to work around each others needs and gender roles got diluted. There were days when my husband did the dishes while I trained teachers online. As a software engineer, he supported me immensely with the use of technology, says the 2018 Fulbright scholar. But even when the stress of the pandemic gets to her, Gulati says it is the thought of the students she serves that makes her count her blessings. When city children are bored, they can sit with a gadget, read a book. The children we work with have to think of meals and work and how to share limited bandwidth with their many siblings so as to see lesson videos of no more than a minute sometimes. Thats when you know how fortunate you are and why the work that you are doing matters, she says. Bengaluru-based instructional designer Shibani Chakroborty, who works with a multinational professional services network, recalls the early days of the lockdown as one of her most traumatic. Unmoored from the meticulous schedule her technical-architect husband and she had worked out, that included the services of a daycare for her four-year child and help to manage home, she found herself floundering. I was not able to provide enough time to either my work or my child. I would feel guilty and exhausted as I tried to cope with the new changes the guilt of being the worst mother, an inefficient employee and an indolent homemaker. It was tough to deal with, and, at one point, I contemplated seeking an experts help to cope with my mental health, but I had to adapt to the new normal eventually, says the 32-year-old.

The distinction between the workplace and home is unique to the urban workforce and is particularly enabling for women, says Aditi Ratho, junior fellow at the Observation Research Foundation, Mumbai, who works at the intersection of labour and gender. It makes space for transition into their different roles and enables essential social interactions, she says.

Anisha Karthikeyan, 36, a human resource professional with a multinational financial services corporation in Delhi, says one of the toughest things to master during this work-from-home phase has been the constant engagement that it has required of her. I am running out of ideas to make home an interesting place, she says. While the chores are divided between her husband, mother and her, keeping her two sons, aged nine and two, occupied has taken constant work. My younger son is now at the stage of pre-primary learning and I am not sure I am equipped to handle his learning needs. I feel guilty that he should be given more time and attention, which I hardly manage, she says. Now, with flexible work hours and breaks between meetings to allow her to regroup, Karthikeyan says she has settled into a makeshift routine. But as easy as it sounds, I now realise its not simple to be a work-from-home mom, she says.

In 2017, a comic strip by French graphic artist Emma, titled You Shouldve Asked, had gone viral on the internet. In it, a new mother who is struggling to attend to a dinner guest and her baby is told by her partner that hed have chipped in if only shed asked. Emma posited that even when men are prepared to help, the onus of organising and remembering a thankless, never-ending, invisible mental load lies almost always with women. Very early on in their lives, women are cast in the role of homemakers and mothers and men as primary wage earners, which doesnt change even when more women join the workforce or work in high-profile jobs. This is particularly true of a country like India, despite some changes in urban middle-class dynamics.

An online survey of urban upper-middle-class working women, of whom 97 per cent had a college degree, conducted by Sonalde Desai, professor of sociology at the University of Maryland, US, and Ravinder Kaur, professor of sociology at the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, found that there was a significant rise in the time spent by women on housework and childcare when they stepped in to fill the void left by the absence of paid help during the lockdown. Seventy-six per cent of the respondents had help in household chores/child care before the lockdown, but, of these, only 30 per cent of the women continued to have some help, says Desai, noting that areas, where most work increases took place, include cooking, kitchen cleaning, washing dishes, dusting and vacuuming and sanitising groceries. And, while men have contributed more during this period, women have shouldered the additional responsibility for their already high thresholds.

The pandemic has also made apparent how careers of successful women are often sustained by networks, both formal and informal. Most workplaces in India do not offer daycare or creche facilities, and, in their absence, women have to form their own support systems. These include parents and in-laws, who watch over the children; part-time or live-in helps to carry out domestic chores such as cooking and cleaning, and, daycares and creches, whose numbers are still not commensurate with the percentage of working women with children. A crisis such as COVID-19 exposes the fragility of such networks in the face of unexpected challenges. With schools and daycares closed indeterminately, women have found themselves turning into not just caregivers but also teachers and playmates.

As the first lecturer on a joint appointment between the government of India and the University of Cambridge, UK, plant biologist Gitanjali Yadav was teaching and running research labs at both Cambridge and The National Institute of Plant Genome Research (NIPGR) in New Delhi, where she works as a staff scientist. The joint appointment meant working in two time zones and frequent overseas travel, nearly once every month. With a robust support system that she and her husband, also an academic, had created for their two children, aged eight and 10, they had structured their lives around her travel schedules. It helped that we all live together on-campus kids, parents, grandparents and great-grandparents. We chose a school close to our home so that the kids would be in quick reach. For all outdoor work, we had a full-time driver for our parents and grandparents to be independent of us. We had two full-time helps and a gardener, she says.

The lockdown, however, showed up the fault lines in the system. With her travels on hold, no paid help and work spilling into weekends, Yadav says, Overnight, I also became a full-time mother, cook, sweeper, school teacher, caregiver and pest-controller, over and above all of the regular work responsibilities across two continents. It has now been five months of total lockdown for us, and we have struggled to establish a balance through shared responsibilities. Even though she has loved the time with her family, the hardest part, she says, has been the complete and sudden loss of alone time and the boundaries that demarcated the workspace from the home. Earlier, I could choose when to walk into my office, or into my kitchen, and I was two different persons in each of these locations with a clear plan. But now, its unutterably seamless. The transition is lost; youre in a meeting and in the kitchen; Youre handling homework and checking a thesis at the same time. Theres no freedom or leisure to think, reflect, focus or plan for the future, she says.

For women in academia worldwide, this added workload has manifested in a dip in academic productivity. While Yadav says she is an exception in that she has produced more papers in the last five months than she did in the previous five years, across the world, early global studies and analyses have shown that it is not the case with a greater percentage of women academics and that the number of pre-prints and paper submissions by women in STEM and social sciences have fallen significantly during this period.

Audrey Truschke, associate professor of South Asian History, University of Rutgers, Newark, New Jersey, the US, and author of Culture of Encounters: Sanskrit at the Mughal Court (2017) and Aurangzeb: The Man and the Myth (2018), says, Before the pandemic, I was asked with some regularity, usually by other female academics, How do you have three kids and still manage to publish so prolifically? My answer was always: I am a huge believer in childcare. It is now August, and I have not had childcare since early March. My productivity has suffered because of this situation. I have cancelled numerous publications at this point.

When schools and daycares closed in New Jersey on March 13, Truschke, 37, was in the process of working out online lessons for the courses she was offering. My three children (aged six, four and two) were all at home, without school or daycare, for the first time in their lives since each was four months old. Like many people, we were scared about potentially getting ill and horrified at the sickness and death burgeoning around us. In the early weeks on the pandemic, my days were a constant triage situation. My husband (an attorney) and I woke up every morning and discussed the bare minimum number of hours we each needed to work that day in order to avoid catastrophe in our professional lives. Then we divvied up the day to specify what times I would and he would do childcare and vice versa. I think my no-screentime rule for the kids evaporated pretty quickly, she says. But over time, she has strategised to cope with the changes.

In September this year, she will begin a course on pandemic pedagogy for her history of south Asia class, that will include archiving COVID-19 through documentation of individual experiences. In an introductory video for the course, Truschke offers her students some practical advice on making sense of the year in all its messiness, including when life walks into the frame. Maybe someone yells something embarrassing in the background, and you werent muted. Or, maybe, your sibling walks by in a less than ideal state of undress. I say: It doesnt matter. Its okay. And its going to happen on my end, too. You can actually hear my children screaming in the background for a bit during this spiel, so I hope that drives home the point that pandemic life is messy for everyone. It isnt reasonable to expect us to be able to separate our professional and personal lives right now, she says.

Its a sentiment that many of the other women echo. Bandyopadhyay says that the rules that work in a normal situation no longer hold true. Women are always taught to put others before themselves at home and be one of the men at work. They are innately good organisers, capable of multitasking. The only thing they are not good at is owning their feelings. But a time like this requires an intuitive response. In June, when I found things particularly difficult, I eventually decided that instead of trying to strike a balance, Ill go with the flow. Work-life balance is a very gender-specific requirement and this crisis has shown that what we really need now men included is adaptability, she says.

For Mahale, things finally began to fall in place when she was pulled into a COVID-response project at work, which helped her channelise her anxiety and energy. Now, back at home with the baby, she is slowly trying to get back to writing and a semblance of her earlier life. I am trying to remind myself to be kind to myself. It was not something I did a good job at during the lockdown, says Mahale.

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The struggle of working urban women to strike a fine balance at home and work during the pandemic - The Indian Express

Union militants see Covid crisis as the perfect excuse to hold the Government to ransom – The Sun

Pupil peril

WHAT must ordinary teachers think about the cynical wrecking actions of their union leaders?

Dedicated classroom staff know the UKs chief medical officers are dead right to say kids are more at risk of long-term harm from staying at home than from returning to school.

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They appreciate more than most how youngsters have been damaged by more than five months without learning, and that the most disadvantaged kids have suffered disproportionately.

Their chief concern will be for the education of their pupils.

Of course they want to be safe, and they want the children to be safe, but they dont want to wait for impossible guarantees before returning to classrooms where the risk of infection is exceptionally small.

That cant be said of the union militants who see the Covid crisis as the perfect excuse to hold the Government to ransom.

For them, pupils are just useful political pawns. The latest obstacles to learning come from Unison demanding more money for cleaning and masks for teachers before it will agree to the return to school.

Wouldnt they and flip-flopping Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer enjoy the Governments discomfort if they turn the start of the new term into another education fiasco?

And if childrens futures are blighted in the process, so what?

Thats a risk the militants seem only too happy to take.

THE spate of illegal parties being broken up by police is shockingly predictable.

Young adults happy to binge on dubious Class A drugs and toxic quantities of alcohol are hardly likely to bother too much about social distancing.

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Meanwhile, sensibly-controlled pubs and restaurants face a return to lockdown if Covid infections rise when the real culprits are those spreading the disease at unregulated gatherings.

The deadly threat that partygoers pose to the elderly or vulnerable clearly doesnt bother them when they selfishly suppose they wont be badly affected if they catch Covid.

Raving idiots.

THE BBC is set to drop crowd favourites Land of Hope and Glory and Rule, Britannia from the Last Night of The Proms in solidarity with Black Lives Matter.

They think the perfect time to make the change is in the absence of a passionate audience who have cared deeply about these songs symbols of our national pride for more than 100 years.

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Comment

THE SUN SAYSBrussels is still bent on ensuring that Britain somehow loses out

Comment

ALLY ROSSHarry Hills World Of TV is a safe space for un-PC comedy

Comment

GEOFF PALMERBanning anthems from the Proms will only manipulate history & create confusion

Comment

TREVOR KAVANAGHMacron is trying to use the migrant crisis as a Brexit negotiating weapon

Comment

THE SUN ON SUNDAY SAYSPresident Macron and his pals must drop their outrageous tactics

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IAIN DUNCAN SMITHAfter exam fiasco we need a bonfire of the 412 quangos undermining MPs

The trouble is, there are too many at the Beeb who just dont like patriotism. Or Britain. Or their audience.

GOT a story? RING The Sun on 0207 782 4104 or WHATSAPP on 07423720250 or EMAILexclusive@the-sun.co.uk

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Union militants see Covid crisis as the perfect excuse to hold the Government to ransom - The Sun

Mood of the nation: Majority believe Centre and states responsible for migrant crisis – India Today

A majority of Indian citizens -- 43 per cent -- believe that both the central and state governments are responsible for the migrant crisis. This is according to the findings of August 2020 round of India Today Mood of the Nation Survey.

FULL RESULTS OF THE INDIA TODAY MOOD OF THE NATION AUGUST 2020

43 per cent of the 12,021 respondents surveyed in the MOTN poll said both the central and state governments were responsible for the mass exodus of migrant workers. Another 14 per cent blamed only the state governments for the migrant crisis, while 10 per cent pointed fingers at the Centre.

However, 13 per cent of the respondents feel it was the fault of employers of the migrant workers and labourers due to which they suffered. Meanwhile, 12 per cent put the blame on rumour and misinformation that the migrants 'fell prey to'.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's March 24 announcement stoked panic. Migrant workers everywhere began their long march home.

Migrants were walking thousands of kilometres on foot, with many hitch hiking on trucks or rode bicycles.

The Shramik special trains announced by the government finally came as a relief in May.

On June 6, the Railway Board said that 58 lakh migrant workers stranded across the country were ferried to their native places during the Covid-19 lockdown. The Indian Railways operated 4,286 Shramik special trains till June 6. Following which, the demand for the trains started to decrease. The government said that workers who were found walking on roads were provided with transportation to the nearest railway stations.

METHODOLOGY OF MOTN POLL

The India Today Mood of the Nation (MOTN) poll was conducted by Delhi-based market research agency between July 15, 2020 and July 27, 2020. This poll has traditionally been conducted using face-to-face interviewing method. However, in this edition of the survey, due to the unprecedented situation arising out of Covid-19 pandemic, all interviews were conducted telephonically using a standard structured questionnaire, which was translated into regional languages.

A total of 12,021 interviews were conducted-67 per cent in rural and 33 per cent in urban areas-spread across 97 parliamentary constituencies and 194 assembly constituencies in 19 states-Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Delhi, Gujarat, Haryana, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal. In each of the assembly constituencies, a fixed number of interviews were done.

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Mood of the nation: Majority believe Centre and states responsible for migrant crisis - India Today

‘Crisis within a crisis:’ Union calls for better migrant-worker protections amid COVID-19 fallout – Brantford Expositor

Canadas largest food processing workers union is calling for sweeping changes to the Temporary Foreign Worker program in the fallout of COVID-19 flare-ups that have seen more than 1,300 migrant workers in Ontario test positive and three die.

The United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) says federal and provincial changes are needed to provide temporary foreign workers with paths to permanent residency, improved labour rights, open work permits and the right to unionization and a collective agreement.

The pandemic has uncovered a crisis within a crisis, said Santiago Escobar, a national representative with UFCW. If measures were implemented a long time ago, probably their situation would be different.

In a 46-page special report, The Status of Migrant Farm Workers in Canada, 2020, the UFCW outlines seven provincial and seven federal reforms needed to protect migrant workers better.

At the federal level, theyre calling to make unionization a mandatory condition of the Temporary Foreign Worker program, end employer-specific work permits, establish a council to reduce Canadas over-reliance on foreign workers and provide a path to permanent residence.

In Ontario, many of UFCWs issues stem from the Agricultural Employees Protection Act. Escobar said the act limits offshore workers ability to unionize under a collective agreement and can force them into precarious work environments by allowing them to agree to extended work hours.

I think its fair to acknowledge agri-food workers are front-line workers, Escobar said. These workers deserve to able to exercise their labour rights, not only because its the human thing to do, but also to maintain the food supply.

UFCW estimates temporary foreign workers make up half of Canadas agriculture workforce. Some 20,000 migrant workers come to Ontario each year, with many in Southwestern Ontarios rich farm belt.

In Windsor-Essex alone, which has seen the bulk of the regions farmgate COVID-19 outbreaks, there are about 8,000 temporary foreign workers. The UFCW said there are likely another 3,000 undocumented agri-food workers in the area.

The advocacy group Justice for Migrant Workers reports 1,370 farm workers have contracted the novel coronavirus in Ontario.

Three workers have died after contracting COVID-19, two in Windsor-Essex and one in Norfolk County.

Escobar said lack of protections for migrant workers and their limited avenues to file work-related grievances likely have exacerbated the pandemics impact on the farm belt.

The UFCW runs a hotline for migrant workers. During a typical season, theyd get about 10 calls a day. Since the pandemic began, theyre averaging more than 35 to 40 calls a day.

Escobar said theyve had complaints of workers not being appropriately paid during their mandatory 14-day self-isolation or having a general lack of knowledge about COVID-19.

Still, he acknowledged that he feels the situation on farms has improved in recent weeks. He was visiting farms in Leamington last week and said all workers had access to proper personal protective equipment (PPE) and were following safety guidelines.

The UFCW report comes as Southwestern Ontario gears up for its harvest season, when temporary foreign workers will be even more essential. This spring, delays in migrant workers arriving in the province wreaked havoc on some farms during planting season.

Despite best efforts, there have been COVID-19 outbreaks on some Canadians farms that have significantly impacted the health and safety of workers, Marielle Hossack, a spokesperson for federal Employment Minister Carla Qualtrough, said in response to the report.

COVID-19 has brought to the forefront issues within the Temporary Foreign Worker program that need to be addressed for the health and well-being of everyone involved.

Since the pandemics start, the Government of Canada has invested $58.6 million to increase temporary foreign workers safety. This has included supports and outreach for migrant workers, strengthening the on-farm inspection process, providing PPE and improving living quarters.

Foreign workers who are laid off, have become ill or have to quarantine due to COVID-19 are now eligible for Employment Insurance.

As of June 2019, foreign workers with an employer-specific work permit can apply for an open work permit if they are mistreated by their current employer.

In response to outbreaks in Windsor-Essex, Ottawa also partnered with the Canadian Red Cross and the province to set up temporary housing for workers required to self-isolate.

Migrant workers are required to be paid during a mandatory 14-day isolation upon their arrival to Canada, and Ontario has extended health-care access to those workers.

Ontario has also launched on-site COVID-19 testing on farms, an online toolkit for farmers, and invested $15 million in the Enhanced Agri-food Workplace Protection program for farms to increase safety measures.

Stopping the virus spread in agri-food workplaces is critical to ensuring worker health and safety is protected and that Ontarios food supply chain remains strong, said a spokesperson for Ontarios Agriculture Ministry.

Twitter.com/MaxatLFPress

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'Crisis within a crisis:' Union calls for better migrant-worker protections amid COVID-19 fallout - Brantford Expositor