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Desperate for Slumber in Delhi, Homeless Encounter a ‘Sleep Mafia’

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Lalit

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[h=2]Asia Pacific[/h]
[h=2]

[/h][h=3]Shocking and distressing to read when there are several NGOs based in Delhi distributing blankets in winter!

Asia Pacific
| Delhi Journal[/h][h=1]Desperate for Slumber in Delhi, Homeless Encounter a ‘Sleep Mafia’[/h]By ELLEN BARRYJAN. 18, 2016







[h=5]CreditDaniel Berehulak for The New York Times



[/h]







DELHI, India — When midnight approaches in Old Delhi and a thick, freezing fog settles over the city, the quilt-wallah Farukh Khan sits on his corner, watching the market for his services come to life.




They shuffle up one by one, men desperate for sleep. The bicycle rickshaw pullers, peeling one of his 20-rupee, or 30-cent, quilts off a pile, fold their bodies into strange angles on the four-foot seats of their vehicles. The day laborers curl their bodies on the frigid sidewalk, sometimes spooned against other men for warmth.
Those who cannot afford to pay Mr. Khan build fires, out of plastic if necessary, and crouch over them, waiting for the night to be over.
[h=2]Does any city have a more stratified sleep economy than wintertime Delhi? The filmmaker Shaunak Sen, who spent two years researching the city’s sleep vendors for a documentary, “Cities of Sleep,” discovered a sprawling gray market that has taken shape around the city’s vast unmet need for shelter. In some places, it breeds what he calls a “sleep mafia, who controls who sleeps where, for how long, and what quality of sleep.”


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A man who paid for a blanket and a place to rest on a winter’s night in Old Delhi. Credit Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times
The story of privatized sleep follows a familiar pattern in this city: After decades of uncontrolled growth, the city government’s inability to provide services like health care, water, transportation and security has given rise to thriving private industries, efficient enough to fulfill the needs of those who can pay.
But shelter, given Delhi’s extremes of heat and cold, is often a matter of survival. The police report collecting more than 3,000 unidentifiable bodies from the streets every year, typically men whose health broke down after years living outdoors. Winter presents especially brutal choices to homeless laborers, who have no place to protect blankets from thieves in the daytime hours. Some try to hide them in the tops of trees.
The moral quandary of making this into a business is at the center of Mr. Sen’s film, which had its premiere at a Mumbai film festival in November. One of his subjects, Ranjit, takes a protective attitude toward his regular “sleepers,” as he calls them, allowing them to drift off to sleep watching Bollywood films for 10 rupees a night. Another, a hard-nosed businessman called Jamaal, increases his price to 50 rupees, from 30, when the temperature drops.
In one scene, when a man pleads, “Sir, I am a poor man; I’ll die,” Jamaal chuckles and replies: “You’re not allowed to die. Even that will cost 1,250 rupees.”
“Look, sleep is the most demanding master there is; no one can stop it when it has chosen to arrive,” Jamaal says in the film. “We were the first to recognize the sheer economic might of sleep.”



Like many of this city’s businesses, sleep vendors are both highly organized and officially nonexistent. In Mr. Khan’s neighborhood, four quilt vendors have divided the sidewalks and public spaces into quadrants, and when night falls, their customers arrange themselves into colonies of lumpy forms. Some have returned to the same spot every night for years.




A drunken man, his hair matted, stumbled up to Mr. Khan and begged. “Brother, please,” he pleaded, and Mr. Khan uttered a curse under his breath, then grabbed a quilt and thrust it at him.
“If I don’t give him the blanket, he will freeze to death,” he said.
Earlier in the week, this had happened, just a block away from Mr. Khan’s spot. The morning street sweeper had tried to rouse a sleeping man from the sidewalk, but he pulled back the blanket and saw that the man’s feet were stiff.
The man, who was around 35, had been stumbling around drunkenly the night before. No one knew who he was; a police officer asked some other men to go through his pockets, in hopes of finding identification, but they were empty. He covered the body with a sheet, and it lay on the sidewalk until the mortuary workers came, at sunset.
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Homeless men rest at a sleep market where they rented blankets in Old Delhi. Credit Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times
A cluster of “pavement dweller” deaths prompted India’s Supreme Court to rule in 2010 that the country’s large cities must provide shelter for 0.1 percent of the population. This winter, Delhi expanded its shelter system to accommodate more than 18,000, but the number of homeless is vast — likely more than 100,000, said Ashwin Parulkar, who researches homelessness at the Delhi’s Center for Policy Research.
The sleep vendors, Mr. Parulkar said, thrive where the government has failed.
“They are exploiting them,” he said. “There is a slew of public policies for these people that are supposed to bypass this kind of exploitation.”
Mr. Khan, who has been here for eight years, says he extends credit for regular customers to a limit of 100, or occasionally 200, rupees. (Several shivering men, who had spent the night around a smoldering fire nearby, snorted in disbelief upon hearing this.) He considers boundaries between vendors so sacred that he will not step across them. He makes regular payments to the police and street sweepers so they do not disturb his sleepers, and he maintains close relations with the local pickpockets so that he can tell them whom not to rob.
“It’s hard,” he said, “but what would happen if I was not here? More people would die.”
He added, “I have the feeling that I am doing charity.”
Among his clients are the inebriated and the insanely hopeful. Mohammad Sajid, one leg misshapen by polio, was sharing a quilt with a friend, also polio-stricken, whom he had met washing dishes at a food stall. The two men had lost their jobs two weeks earlier, and every day their store of money dwindled: 2 rupees to use public toilets, 5 rupees to bathe, 5 rupees for a half-cup of tea, 10 rupees for half a quilt.
His friend was thinking of returning to his village, at least until the cold passed, but Mr. Sajid shook his head.
“I will go back,” he said. “But first I want to make something of myself.”
Mr. Khan knows better. Come back in five years, he said, and half of these guys will still be here.
“Everybody here is a sad story,” he said. “Why would a happy story come to sleep here?” He poured himself a plastic cup of whiskey. “They will get up in the morning, use the toilet, and they will be ready for work. The system never finishes.”
Ravi Mishra contributed reporting.


http://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/19/world/asia/delhi-sleep-economy.html




 
There is no shortage of homeless people in delhi.

Many get added to their numbers every day

Unless there are counter magnets to take people away from delhi ,there is no solution.

Govt and private agencies can do to some extent to alleviate the suffering of these people.

Many are afraid to go these shelters as drug addicts , petty criminals also

go there.

They prefer to sleep under flyovers lighting a fire or some rickshaw pullers sleep on their cycle rickshaws
 
Cold Claims Lives Of Homeless In Delhi; Pitch For 'Bigger' Shelters


Delhi | Press Trust of India | Updated: January 21, 2016 07:18 IST

New Delhi: The intense cold wave has claimed seven lives in Delhi over the last two days alone, taking the toll of homeless people this month to around 120, an NGO claimed on Wednesday.

As per the Zonal Integrated Police Network, at least 150 unidentified bodies have been found in Delhi in January. "Homeless people constitute 80 per cent of that figure," Centre for Holistic Development (CHD) said.

Sunil Kumar Aledia of CHD said, contrary to official claims, the existing shelters for the homeless were not capable of housing more than 9,000 people as the per capita space allotted was "far less" than the original masterplan.

On Monday, bodies of the homeless persons, aged 25, 70, 40, 25 and 50 were found at Connaught Place, CR Park, Civil Lines, and Kashmere Gate, while two were found in the Kashmere Gate area on Tuesday.







Delhi Government's estimate pegs the number of homeless in the city at 16,760, while activists working in the field maintain that the figure should be not less than 1.80 lakh.

The current arrangements, including 84 permanent shelters, 111 porta cabins, 49 tents, two shelters managed by the Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC), can house 18,181 people, according to the Delhi Urban Shelter Improvement Board (DUSIB).

Mr Aledia said the government estimate is "inflated" as the shelters cover an area of around 2.5 lakh sq feet as against 19 lakh sq feet space required as per the Delhi Master Plan for 2021.

As per numbers collated from Zonal Integrated Police Network and Ministry of Home Affairs, around 350 homeless died over the last two months since the onset of the cold, Mr Aledia said.
 
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