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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, September 02, 2001 |
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Did poor hygiene cause the deaths?
By Prafulla Das
KASHIPUR, (Orissa) SEPT. 1. Grief and misery have all but become
seasonal visitors to Kashipur. Year after year, this remote block
in Orissa's Rayagada district falls prey to human deprivation.
But in tandem with human misery, ironies too sweep the rugged
terrain.
This season is no different. Like many years in the past, fresh
allegations are doing the rounds that people of Kashipur are
dying due to starvation. A section of the media has already
reported that starvation has claimed 19 lives in the region since
July.
The State Government admits the deaths but claims that they were
primarily due to food poisoning. And as the debate rages, there
is little succour for the hapless inhabitants.
``Be it hunger deaths or deaths to due to food poisoning, the sum
total is that we in Kashipur are hopelessly poor,'' says Mr.
Kashinath Majhi of Panasguda village, whose son died consuming
mango kernel paste and other items.
That's how the Kondh tribals of Kashipur have always been. The
then Prime Minister, Rajiv Gandhi, had come calling as far back
as in 1987 and was a catalyst for launching the Orissa Tribal
Development Project for Kashipur. After more than a decade and
Rs. 60 crores spent, there is no perceptible improvement in
people's plight. Nobody has grown richer. If anything, the number
of below the poverty line (BPL) card holders in the block have
gone up from 15,000 in 1992 to 24,000 by the last count.
The pauperisation is visible when one hits the dirt tracks to go
round the faceless villages of the region. There is unanimity
that poverty here is back-breaking. But claims that hunger is
killing people is hotly disputed.
Even many of those who have lost their kith and kin and some of
those who survived after medical treatment vouch that it wasn't a
case of starvation. Maybe, it was a result of their food habits
and lack of proper hygiene.
The critics of the Government claim that the tribals have died
eating mango kernels on being driven by hunger. However, it is a
fact that the tribals are eating mango kernel traditionally. Most
of the tribal families store dry mango kernels, ragi, tamarind
seeds, and different types of millets to cope with the situation
during the rainy season, when food is scarce and there is no
work. But there is little to doubt that the Government is found
wanting in Kashipur on several counts. Food is in short supply.
Work is also scarce. Health facility is inadequate and the best
of the Government's action plans remain more on paper.
While some say the tribals eat mango kernels out of compulsion, a
majority are of the view that it was a traditional food for them.
The Rayagada District Collector, Mr. Bishnupada Sethi, says that
``there is poverty but no hunger. Nobody is being allowed to die
of starvation.'' He points out that around 50,000 people of
Kashipur's one lakh-odd population were under the security net,
including schemes such as the BPL cards and pension.
Significantly, the Congress leader and Rayagada Zilla Parishad
president, Mr. Bijay Gamang, feels the recent deaths had nothing
to do with starvation. ``The deaths may have occurred due to
contamination of food, including the preparation made out of
mango kernel.''
Many tribals are still consuming mango kernel paste including
some who have rice at home. This was also the case when seven
persons died in Panasguda. They had cooked a meal of rice and a
gruel of mango kernel as side dish. ``The paste apparently got
contaminated that day,'' says Mr. Biswanath Majhi, a resident of
Panasguda, who lost his wife, mother, and son that fateful day.
He was also taken ill, but survived after medical treatment.
Tribals form 65 per cent of Kashipur's population. Another 20 per
cent of the block's population are scheduled castes and the rest
belong to other castes. A vast majority of the population thrives
on whatever they grow in the sloppy land, the barren hills and
the fast depleting forests.
That Kashipur continues to be neglected by the Government like
many other backward pockets in the State is clear from the fact
that three of the 11 blocks in Rayagada district are managing
without anybody manning the post of Block Development Officers
(BDO). Kashipur has been without a BDO for the past five months.
Many posts of doctors and health workers are also lying vacant in
Kashipur and other blocks of Rayagada.
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