Live
- Tribal Ashram school girl students fall sick again
- Grand finale of Innovation marathon begins at IIT Tirupati
- Ensure no inconvenience to bus passengers: MLA
- Being overweight surpasses smoking as Australia's leading health risk
- Rush of Devotees at Tirumala normal, to take six hours for darshans
- Thiruvannamalai turns a major revenue earner for RTC
- Development works in Warangal to take off on war-footing: Ponguleti
- Great day for America: Trump welcomes FBI chief's resignation announcement
- SAAP chief for bringing hi-tech into sports
- Paddy purchases to be sped up
Just In
For Delhi’s homeless, voter card is a passport to better life
Neetu Shahi, a 35-year-old homeless woman and mother of four small children, feels lucky she has a voter identity card which will allow her to cast her ballot in the upcoming Delhi election.
New Delhi: Neetu Shahi, a 35-year-old homeless woman and mother of four small children, feels lucky she has a voter identity card which will allow her to cast her ballot in the upcoming Delhi election.
Shahi is among a growing number of homeless people - numbering nearly 10,000 - who can cast their vote due to efforts of the Election Commission. Polling officials in Delhi said 9,369 homeless people will be eligible to exercise their franchise in the Feb 7 poll.
Though official data puts the number of homeless in the metropolis at around 65,000, it is not easy to keep track as many of them keep changing their location. Shahi has been living on a footpath near the Bangla Sahib Gurdwara in central Delhi for many years now and, like many others there, she depends on the gurdwara for her daily meals.
"Voting or not... it does not make any difference for us. But I will still vote," she told IANS.
The voter i-card is not a simple document for Shahi, which will allow her to vote. She feels it is a passport to improve her life.
"The card will help me get my children enrolled in government-run schools," she said.
Shahi, like many other homeless people IANS spoke to, hopes the voter i-card will also help them get permanent shelters from the government.
Delhi Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) Chandra Bhushan Kumar told IANS that polling officials were following all the guidelines in enrolling homeless people.
"Most of them live on footpaths and night shelters, and we follow all standard guidelines of the Election Commission before enrolling them," the CEO said.
He said 5,500 homeless voters were registered with the poll panel for the 2013 assembly elections, while the number of such voters in Delhi for the Lok Sabha elections rose to 7,614.
The CEO described the increase as a "positive sign" for the electoral process.
He said poll panel officials checked about the presence of a homeless person thrice at a particular point to ascertain whether he or she continued to live there.
A special drive, which started Jan 5 and ended ahead of the announcement of poll dates, was also conducted to enroll the homeless.
He said the homeless voters were being encouraged to cast their ballot. Vishal, a 70-year-old homeless woman, who came to Delhi five years ago from Chennai, stays on pavements near Gole Dak Khana.
"I came to Delhi long ago. I knew I would go back home (Chennai) but somehow I stayed here. Now I feel this is the place I belong to," she told IANS.
She said she has received her voter i-card and will use it to prove her identity to policemen. "I will feel more at home in Delhi now," she said.
By: Sushil Kumar
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com