Jan Breman at the lectern, with Sashi Kumar, N.Ram and Shree Kumar on the dais |
The TG
Narayanan Memorial Lecture 2013 delivered today, at 6:15 pm, by Dr. Jan Breman on Caring for Destitution or Not? was an
eye-opener for students of journalism and audience alike. The Lecture series, organised by the Asian College of Journalism
was presided over by Mr.N.Ram, Trustee, Media Development Foundation and well-attended by students of journalism, invitees from other institutions among a host of other dignitaries.
Speaking
on the occasion, Mr. Ram recollected Mr.T.G.Narayanan’s services in the field
of journalism, particularly with The Hindu as its Rangoon correspondent and
then as the Calcutta correspondent where his outstanding work in covering the
Bengal famine was much appreciated and is still much talked about. While lamenting
the poor role of the news media in covering chronic hunger in the hinterlands,
he also stressed on the importance of journalists in cultivating a sense of
proportion/balance in their coverage of news. Mere trivialization of news is
not journalism, he averred, and added on a sad note that, the general tendency in Indian journalism today was to avoid presenting the gloomy side, and instead, they keep presenting the brighter side alone. But that should not be the case. In his concluding remarks, he sounded a note of caution to the journalism fraternity, saying, 'you can study anything under the
sun, but you can’t be a good journalist unless you cover deprivation'!
The
speaker of the day Dr. Jan Breman spoke extensively about his research on the
area of deprivation in the Indian State of Gujarat. Excerpts from his lecture:
Members of the audience, absorbed and spell-bound..! |
My
presentation will focus on West India where I have carried out fieldwork in
both rural and urban localities during the past half century. From the
pre-colonial era onwards members of the tribal caste called Halpati in south
Gujarat used to be attached as farm servants to the main landowners of higher
castes. Engaged in a condition of bondage they had a right to livelihood and
received social benefits in exchange for serving their patrons dutifully and
loyally in a relationship of life time duration which was passed on from
generation to generation.
the CLRI Auditorium, Adyar |
In rural
Gujarat, the greatest political capital was made out of the state pension for
which old and disabled agricultural workers qualified who lived in destitution.
In 1981 the then Congress government launched this scheme as an election stunt.
A few years later, it declared that the state pension would be paid to all aged
and handicapped workers without adult children and with no means of their own. They
would be entitled to receive 50 rupees per person per month and 100 rupees per
family, an allowance which was doubled in 1991. Although insufficient for
survival, such trifles would alleviate the plight of all those unable to
sustain themselves.
I have
monitored in the area of my research the impact of the Social Security Bill
passed in parliament in late 2008 and meant to alleviate the destitution of the
most vulnerable categories, specifically old aged men and women, widows, and
handicapped adults and minors belonging to households which have a priority
ranking in the bpl ist (i.e scoring between 0 and 16). Of such households stuck
far below the threshold of deprivation in the four villages of my longitudinal
research in south Gujarat not yet one out of five qualify for benefits that
should have been made available to them under the social security bill. It
means that the large majority of the non-labouring poor are excluded from their
legal dues. But more deprived from receiving entitlements than the old aged and
widows are the disabled, a substantial category which barely figures in the
government statistics. The provision of state benefits in the villages of my
recurrent anthropological fieldwork have been rechecked by the staff of a rural
hospital with a long standing practice of community health interventions in the
vicinity. Local-level based animators belonging to the milieu of the poor
themselves were selected and trained to conduct a survey. They were asked to go
around in the village of their residence – four, of which two are also the
sites of my own fieldwork – to identify all inhabitants who are improvident and
unable to take care of their own maintenance, to help preparing the files of
all those who are potential beneficiaries and to facilitate the processing of
their applications by the district authorities. In the survey carried out in
the first half of 2012 a total of 589 persons (all of them old aged, widowed or
deserted women and handicapped) were listed irrespective of their bpl status
and meeting or not the formal criteria required to become eligible for a
benefit, eg. Scoring not above 16 in the bpl ranking, having no adult son, in
the case of widows an annual income of less than 2,400 rupees, and handicapped
for more than 80 per cent of their abilities. It means that out of the total
population in these four villages roughly 7 per cent would have to be
classified as destitute. It is a rather low estimate, in my opinion, caused by
a style of work and life which makes the labouring poor vulnerable to an
inordinately high morbidity and premature death rate. Of males in particular,
as indicated by the very large proportion of females found in destitution, not
less than four fifth of the 589 identified. From this total, only 118, or one
out of five, comply with the formal criteria set for granting the stipulated
cash benefit, but out of this number only 38 managed to become registered as
beneficiaries.
The cash
benefit, that comes as a prize for the fortunate ones is what amounts to a
lottery, moderates but fails to end destitution because it does not even allow
them to satisfy their most minimal needs. The money orders for what are meant
to be monthly allowances are sent with long, variable intervals in between and
this irregularity adds to the uncertainty that the benefits will continue to be
disbursed. Recipients are not informed why their entitlements are suddenly withdrawn.
This may happen when a minor son reaches the age of 21 years, since he is
henceforth supposed to take care of his widowed mother or aged parents. In
other instances there is no good reason for abrupt stopping payment. Can this
be attributed to a temporary problem, lack of sufficient expertise, which will
be over once the agencies involved in making the remittances become better
versed with what they have to do?
No comments:
Post a Comment