
Threat of deportation outside vs joblessness at home: Dilemma of migrants as they return
'Amader akhon shakher korater obostha, Jedike jabo sedike katbe (It's a double-edged sword. Wherever we go, there is peril). We're being hounded there and can't stay. But here, there are no jobs,' Ajmal, who returned to Malda last month after allegedly spending six days in police detention, told The Indian Express.
Ajmal's predicament echoes across West Bengal, where thousands of migrant workers are trudging back to the state from cities such as Delhi and Gurugram against the backdrop of a growing backlash against 'illegal Bangladeshis'.
According to state government sources, over 1,000 migrants from across India have returned so far, although they also admit that the actual numbers could be higher.
Mosaraf Hussen, the TMC MLA from Itahar in Uttar Dinajpur and the party's minority cell chairman, claimed several migrants in his constituency had returned from Gurugram. Hussen has set up a help desk to assist the returning migrants.
'We will have to make plans for them if they start returning in large numbers,' he said.
In the face of the arrivals, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee has asked Labour Minister Moloy Ghatak and West Bengal Migrant Welfare Board chairman Samirul Islam to hold a meeting with the state chief secretary and explore avenues of employment for the migrants.
'As our CM has said, those migrant labourers who have returned or are returning to Bengal will be provided alternate avenues of income. There are enough employment opportunities in the state,' Islam, a Rajya Sabha MP from the Trinamool Congress, said.
Of this, however, even the returning migrant workers remain sceptical. Although he allegedly spent several days in detention, Ajmal is still considering returning to Gurugram. 'We would make between Rs 25,000 to Rs 28,000/month at Gurugram. I have elderly parents, three brothers and a sister to take care of. What will we eat if we don't go to work outside?' he asked.
In Malda's Chanchal, Mukul Hossain is afraid of returning to Gurugram although he knows he may have little choice. A mason, Hussain was allegedly picked up by the police on July 11, kept in detention for five days, and assaulted while in custody.
Now back home, he wonders if he should return. 'First, I will try to start a business in Bengal. If we succeed, we will stay, but if we don't, we will have to return,' he said. 'The state government is saying that they will arrange work for us but the question is whether I can earn as much in Bengal as we did there [in the National capital Region]'.
But those Bengali-speaking migrants who remain in NCR are finding it harder to find work. Noor Alam, a delivery executive working in Gurugram, was detained for two days last month and is now trying to return home to Chanchal. 'The problem is that, now, we aren't getting proper work here in Gurugram. Of the 25 Bengali families in our mohalla in Gurugram, 20 have returned. We're trying to go back but are having trouble finding train reservations,' he said.
With just months to go for the state assembly polls, the migrants' return is snowballing into a political row, with the Opposition accusing the ruling Trinamool Congress of inaction.
'The TMC is doing cosmetic surgery but they are not trying to make industry here generate employment. They are shouting and trying to get political mileage. But they are not trying to solve the problem. Have you heard the West Bengal government talked with Delhi [or Haryana] governments? They only want the problem to linger,' senior Congress leader and former Baharampur MP Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury said.
Labourers were coming 'in small groups' and not in 'large numbers', Asif Faruq, state secretary of the Parijayee Shramik Aikya Mancha – or the Migrant Labourers Unified Forum, said. But he also admitted there was 'lack of data' when it came to migrant workers and their movement. 'They are coming in small groups wherever they are detained or harassed by police in pockets in different states including Haryana. For instance, migrants from some pockets in Delhi are returning but others are still working there. However, it is also true that the nature of jobs they do outside and the money they earn is not possible here. We are waiting to see what the government has in store for them,' he said.
Meanwhile, as the state continues to struggle for a response to the looming problem, some migrants remain in the national capital region, determined to stay on if they can. Among them is Alam Ali, another resident of Chanchal who works as a housekeeper in Gurugram.
'My father-in-law and I work in a housing society and earn Rs 12,000. We also wash cars, which makes us an additional Rs 5000-6000/month. Where will we get such a salary in Bengal? We may go to Bengal for some days but after normalcy returns, we will return,' he said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
5 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Indian migrants' problem of document transfers
The run-up to India's 79th Independence Day has been mired in debates around citizenship and voting rights. The ongoing debate around Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls and controversies and claims and counterclaims about (West) Bengali migrant workers being dubbed Bangladeshis has also brought to fore questions about whether or not people being probed have enough documents. Another story in these pages earlier this week, looked at linguistic diasporas inside and outside India. File photo


Scroll.in
35 minutes ago
- Scroll.in
6.5% GDP growth not enough to become ‘Viksit Bharat': NITI Aayog CEO
NITI Aayog Chief Executive Office BVR Subrahmanyam on Thursday said that India's annual Gross Domestic Product growth needs to be 8%, and not 6.5%, if the country wants to achieve the target of becoming a developed economy by 2047, The Indian Express reported. Subrahmanyam made the comment while pointing to the important role statistics needs to play in policymaking. 'This data business is very, very important for our goal of Viksit Bharat,' the newspaper quoted Subrahmanyam as saying. 'After all, if you grow at 6.5%, you will not be Viksit Bharat; [if] you grow at 8%, you will be Viksit Bharat.' He added: 'It looks very small, 1.5%. But the difference, I tell you, in 2047 is going to be immense… What looks very minuscule can have major, major difference at the end.' Subrahmanyam was speaking at a meeting of statistical advisers in ministries and departments. In March, NITI Aayog member Arvind Virmani had said that India only needed an average real GDP growth rate of 6% to 6.2% to become a developed economy by 2047, the year India completes 100 years of independence, Moneycontrol reported. The NITI Aayog is the main public policy think tank of the Union government. On May 30, provisional estimates released by the Union government showed that India's real GDP for the financial year 2024-'25 grew by 6.5%. This was the slowest growth rate since the Covid-19 pandemic year of 2020-'21. In the financial year 2023-'24, the country's real GDP was 9.2%. The remark by Subrahmanyam came amid global economic headwinds. United States President Donald Trump's imposition of so-called reciprocal tariffs on dozens of countries, including a 25% levy on India, for not finalising trade agreements with Washington, has led to concerns of a broader trade war that could disrupt the global economy.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Will continue to fight for Assamese people: Himanta
Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Friday said he would continue to fight for the indigenous people of Assam and their identity. Independence Day 2025 Op Sindoor to water cutoff: PM Modi slams Pak in I-Day speech GST reforms by Diwali to cut daily-use taxes: PM Modi Terrorism, tech, more: PM's I-Day speech highlights Hoisting the national flag at the Independence Day function in Guwahati, Sarma said his government cleared encroachments from 1.2 lakh bigha (over 16,000 hectare) of land, which is a part of that fight. "Like love jihad, now a section is trying to threaten Assamese identity by indulging in land jihad. Through a series of evictions, we have given the message that our government will never compromise," he said. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like The Simple Morning Habit for a Flatter Belly After 50! Lulutox Undo Apparently hinting towards Bengali-speaking Muslims, he said "unknown" people's aggression changed the demography of lower and central Assam, and then they eyed upper and north Assam. "To stop them, we have declared war on their aggression. I promise that we will evict the unknown people from every piece of grazing land, tribal belt and government land," he said. Live Events The CM said that the assembly constituencies were redefined as part of this commitment, and by the latest delimitation exercise, the government has been able to "secure" Assam for indigenous people for many decades. "These unknown people are advancing to capture political power now, after almost capturing economic power. They have captured every sphere of the construction sector. We cannot remain silent. Sarma said that if the youth remain silent and Assamese people are ready for compromise, then in just 10 years, the indigenous people will lose their jati, mati, bheti (community, land, homeland). "In just 15 years, 80 per cent of the state's ministers will be from them. And within two decades, this national flag on Independence Day will be hoisted by an unknown chief minister. This is Assam's future," he claimed. Sarma said that as a proud Assamese and Indian, he is not ready to accept such a situation and believes that no Assamese people are ready to accept it. "We have to fight. We take a pledge under this tricolour that we will not be finished and we will fight. We will again fight for survival. Our fight is not with arms, but a fight for self-determination," he said.