After graft, CWG faces allegations of human rights violation

As controversy rages over scams in Commonwealth Games, a group of NGOs on Thursday raised the issue of “large-scale human rights violation” due to the event, alleging flouting of labour laws and “arbitrary” eviction of the homeless and slum-dwellers.

A demand was even made to “call off” the Games, with some rights activists saying it is creating “negative social impact and suffering” and disfiguring Delhi's “urban fabric”.

“The Games has brought displacement and suffering for thousands of poor people in the city. The allegations of corruption are already there. Delhiites are not going to benefit by the Games,” Miloon Kothari from NGO Housing and Land Rights Network said at a press conference here.

The groups also raised the issue of the “actual costs” of the Games, claiming that different agencies are doling out different figures and there is no accountability.

They demanded halt to evictions, rehabilitation of the displaced families, probe into diversion of SC funds for Games and setting up of surveillance centres at railway and bus stations to prevent trafficking of women during the event.

There was “large-scale violation” of rights of labourers in various Games construction sites, with workers being paid two-third or half the minimum wage, wages being held back and they being made to live in “sub-human conditions”, Shashi Saxena of Peoples Union for Democratic Rights (PUDR) said.

“There is lack of safety equipment. Parliament has been informed that 42 workers died at the sites. We don’t know whether their families have been compensated,” she said.

Jawahar Singh from NGO Jhuggi Jhopri Ekta Manch said slum dwellers have been evicted arbitrarily, without notice and many a times without compensation or rehabilitation package for construction purposes related to the Games.

“In December 2009, 2000 jhuggies were removed from Badli, in January 2009, a community was evicted from Prabhu Market. There are reports that Delhi government has identified 44 more slum clusters for demolition,” he said.

Mansur Khan of Shahri Adhikar Manch claimed beggars and homeless labourers are being arbitrarily detained under the “clean-up” drive before the Games while Rashmi Sinha of NGO “Apne Aap” raised the apprehensions of increase in trafficking and prostitution during the sporting event.

Paul Divakar of National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights spoke on alleged diversion of Rs 744 crore from SC welfare fund for the Games by the Delhi government and claimed that much more funds were diverted for other heads in recent years.

“Even if the Games turn out to be a success miraculously, it is evident that serious human rights violations are taking place... Delhi is becoming an apartheid city. The Prime Minister should intervene and some of us feel it is not too late even to call off the Games," Kothari said.

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