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posting this news PUBLISHED IN "THE PIONEER" for perusal
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Sudhir Mishra/Bolangir
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MAOIST-COP FEAR, CLIMATIC VAGARIES TRIGGER MIGRATION’
Thursday, 30
July 2015 | SUDHIR MISHRA | BALANGIR | in Bhubaneswar
Government schemes have failed to attract and keep rural
youths at home. Nothing seems to stop youths from moving to outside States to
seek employment. The trend is prevalent not only in the 10 distress migration
prone districts of western Odisha, but also from the hilly and tribal areas of
southern Odisha.
Conflict situation and climate induced changed conditions
are accentuating the youth migration from their native village to far-off
places like Mumbai, Uttar Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and other places.
This was observed by speakers at a regional level
consultation, organised by Aide at Action, Youth Council for Development
Alternatives (YCDA), and Western Odisha Migration Network at Bargarh. It was
attended from representatives of 20 districts of south and western Odisha,
besides CWC members and lawyers, academicians and civil society activists.
Conflict migration basically points out to a situation
where people especially youth are sandwiched between two conflicting forces
.The Maoist activity in villages is the best example. If the youth stays in the
village, the ultras would try to woo them. Once they join out of fear or
compulsion or otherwise they would become the target of police. Either way they
are going to suffer, the speakers said.
Besides the conflict migration, migration due to climate
change has accentuated the crisis further in hilly areas of southern Odisha
especially in Koraput. Due to climatic change, heavy rainfall is taking place
resulting in flash flood and causing havoc to paddy and other cultivation. As
the cultivable land in these areas are limited once the source of income is
lost in the flash flood, poor tribals have no other options but to migrate to
far-flung places to face torture and exploitation, said a civil society
activist from Koraput.
Youth migrants between 18 and 35 years of age are the
powerful agents of change and development. However, poverty, lack of
development and unemployment in the villages as well as discrimination and
social exclusion are forcing them to migrate, said a survey conducted in
Bargarh, Nuapada and Boudh districts by YCDA.
According to 2001 Census, 307 millions which is 30 per
cent of the population of India are migrants and in Odisha 10.8 millions are
migrants. The poor people who migrate also face torture and exploitation there
and even face the horrifying incidents like chopping of hands of two migrants
workers of Kalahandi in 2013. Safe, dignified and secured migration is a basic
right of every migrant, said Umi Daniel of Aide et Actio
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