ID cards do little to change life in Tembhli

[image: This brand new road is a source of excitement for the village
children] <http://www.dw-world.de/popups/popup_lupe/0,,6363177,00.html>
*This brand new road is a source of excitement for the village
children<http://www.dw-world.de/popups/popup_lupe/0,,6363177,00.html>
*
In September, a nondescript tribal hamlet in India suddenly found itself in
the national spotlight when the PM turned up to launch a project to issue
Unique Identification (UID) numbers. But the excitement faded fast.


In the lazy midday sun, it is playtime for the children in the tribal hamlet
of Tembhli in India's western state of Maharashtra. Using sticks, they roll
old tire tubes and stones along a concrete road. They are excited to have
such a smooth surface to play on.



Three months ago, this road did not exist. But in September the otherwise
sleepy hamlet saw a flurry of activity as it prepared to receive Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh and Congress Party President Sonia Gandhi, who were
coming to distribute the first set of Unique Identification (UID) cards.



Titled "Aadhaar," meaning support, the project aims to equip each Indian
citizen with biometric identification numbers based on thumbprints and iris
scans. This ambitious scheme has come under heavy criticism for several
reasons, one of them being the claim by some experts that it will result in
the invasion of privacy. But the Indian government has defended the project,
claiming it will help poor and disadvantaged citizens avail public welfare
schemes more easily.

[image: Road construction has been left incomplete in some parts of Tembhli,
with stones and rubble lying
around]<http://www.dw-world.de/popups/popup_lupe/0,,6363177_ind_1,00.html>
*Road construction has been left incomplete in some parts of
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*Fleeting elation*



After years of feeling abandoned, the villagers of Tembhli were initially
thrilled to be chosen for a visit by no less than the prime minister
himself, but their elation did not last long.



The attention bestowed on them by the government was only fleeting, says
28-year-old Sunanda Karma Thakre, who with her husband is one of the many
who usually migrate to the neighboring state of Gujarat to find work.



"We were about to leave for Gujarat this year too, but then we heard of the
prime minister’s visit. We decided to stay, thinking the ministers would
help us find work here. But that did not materialize," she points out.



"If they come again, we will tell them about our troubles. But all these
government officials only came to us around the time of the PM’s visit. Now
no one seems to be interested in listening to us. No one has stepped into
the village since then. Even the roads that were being built lie incomplete
and some of us still don’t have electricity."



[image: Sunanda Karma Thakre is a skeptical about the new biometric UID
cards] 
<http://www.dw-world.de/popups/popup_lupe/0,,6363177_ind_2,00.html>*Sunanda
Karma Thakre is a skeptical about the new biometric UID
cards<http://www.dw-world.de/popups/popup_lupe/0,,6363177_ind_2,00.html>
*

*Lack of work opportunities drive laborers away*



Laborers in Tembhli struggle to find occasional work as farm hands in the
nearby fields, which fetches them barely a euro a day. By comparison, the
state of Gujarat, especially the Saurashtra region, offers plenty of
employment opportunities on the sugarcane plantations, cotton and
groundnut-crushing factories, or on farms. This work can fetch a laborer
between two to three euros a day. This ensures that when they return to
Tembhli at the beginning of monsoon, they have a decent amount saved up.



While it may seem to be an advantage in terms of income, migration brings
with it a host of other problems. The migrants often leave their homes
behind to live in dire conditions in Gujarat, often without shelter. On top
of this, they have to uproot their families every year, taking their
children out of school, causing a high dropout rate and increasing
illiteracy.



*Immediate needs have to be addressed*



What is important right now is to address the villagers’ more immediate
needs of employment and housing, says Madi Raju Makkan, a member of the
Tembhli Gram Panchayat, or village council.



"Implementation of the National Rural Employment Guarantee scheme should
begin as soon as possible. The government makes promises and then doesn’t
follow up on them. That is why the people lose all hope of getting work and
leave for Saurashtra. There are many in our village with a 'below poverty
line' status, who don’t have proper houses to live in. Many public schemes
in the village are incomplete and our village is often inundated in the
monsoon floods. We have lodged many appeals, but the government has not
taken any initiatives to act on them."



[image: Many migrant workers are forced to live on the streets]*Many migrant
workers are forced to live on the streets*

The Unique Identification (UID) cards are supposed to change matters.
Villagers can seek loans and open bank accounts more easily. Officials claim
the cards will help improve execution of the National Rural Employment
Guarantee Scheme, although it is not yet clear how this will work.



It may be too soon to tell whether these cards will make a difference.
However, as the initial hype and excitement fades away, there is increasing
disillusionment among the people of Tembhli as they realize that while the
UID card is a much needed proof of identity, it will not give them what they
want most of all – a chance to earn a better living.



Author: Pia Chandavarkar (Tembhli)
Editor: Anne Thomas


http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,6363177,00.html
-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist

The UID project is going to do almost exactly the same thing which the
predecessors of Hitler did, else how is it that Germany always had the lists

of Jewish names even prior to the arrival of the Nazis? The Nazis got these
lists with the help of IBM which was in the 'census' business that included
racial census that entailed not only count the Jews but also identifying
them. At the United States Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC, there is an
exhibit of an IBM Hollerith D-11 card sorting machine that was responsible
for organising the census of 1933 that first identified the Jews.

*SAY NO TO UID CAMPAIGN-  SPREAD THE WORD AND JOIN FB GROUP*
*http://aadhararticles.blogspot.com/
http://questioningaadhaar.blogspot.com/*
http://www.youtube.com/my_playlists?p=B67A798223F96E73

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