jharkhand starvation deaths | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Wed, 21 Nov 2018 05:13:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png jharkhand starvation deaths | SabrangIndia 32 32 In the Absence of Aadhaar, Starvation Deaths Continue in Jharkhand https://sabrangindia.in/absence-aadhaar-starvation-deaths-continue-jharkhand/ Wed, 21 Nov 2018 05:13:42 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/11/21/absence-aadhaar-starvation-deaths-continue-jharkhand/ The most recent victim is 45-year-old Kaleshwar Soren, who died of hunger and destitution on November 11, in Mahuadanr village of Dumka district.   The children of families denied benefits due to lack of Aadhaar, with poor education, negligible access to health services and employment, are staring at a bleak future.   As the fear […]

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The most recent victim is 45-year-old Kaleshwar Soren, who died of hunger and destitution on November 11, in Mahuadanr village of Dumka district.

Jharkhnad starvation death
The children of families denied benefits due to lack of Aadhaar, with poor education, negligible access to health services and employment, are staring at a bleak future.
 
As the fear of drought looms large in the state, Jharkhand has reported two new cases of starvation deaths in the last one month. The latest fact- finding report by the Right to Food ( RTF) campaign in Jharkhand highlights the grim reality of food security on the ground which has led to the death of over 17 persons since September 2017.

Speaking to Newsclick, Ashrafi Nand Prasad of the RTF campaign said,”The starvation deaths that have gripped the state need to be understood in the context of biometric linking. Workers, primarily wage workers and older, marginalised sections, are bearing the brunt of the Aadhaar project.”

The most recent victim of the politics over food security was 45-year-old Kaleshwar Soren, who died of hunger and destitution on November 11, in Mahuadanr village of Jama block of Dumka district. Nand Prasad said, “The ration card of Kaleshwar’s family, along with those of 27 others were cancelled in 2016 following their failure of linking the ration cards to Aadhar.”

Twenty-six households were reinstated on the ration list a year after their card was cancelled and after they submitted their Aadhaar and bank account details. Jian Kisku of the same village, whose ration card was also cancelled in 2016, is yet to get back on the ration list as neither he nor his wife has Aadhaar.

Similarly, after  the cancellation of the card, Kaleshwar was struggling to survive on the food given by his neighbours, his family was not receiving any grains under the public distribution system (PDS) as their ration cards were not linked. According to the ration dealer, after the cancellation of the ration card, when Kaleshwar was asked to submit his Aadhaar to get back on the ration list, he could not submit it as he had misplaced it.

Living in extreme deprivation, multiple families like that of Kaleshwar’s, are currently suffering from the lack of availability of food and social support from the state, the RTF campaign said.
Prasad added,”With the slew of deaths in 2017, the government came up with a “solution”in the form of Khadyan Kosh (grain bank) Yojana, where the mukhiya (Head) of the Gram Panchayat can give grains to vulnerable families, in the case of Kaleshwar, the claims of the Mukhiya of providing Kaleshwar with support cannot be verified.”

Kaleshwar’s death comes close on the heels of the deaths of Moti Yadav of Margomunda block (Deoghar). Yadav was visually impaired, despite this he did not receive disability pension.
Another death–Of the 75-year-old Sita Devi points towards the failure of the Aadhaar project, despite having a ration card, due to her age and illness Devi could not authenticate her identity which led to the denial of foodgrains to her. She was also living in destitution as she could not receive her pension because her bank account was not linked with the Aadhaar card.

The 17 starvation deaths, since September 2017, include eight adivasis, four Dalits and five of backward communities. Contrary to the government’s claims, the immediate causes of these deaths include denial of foodgrains due to absence of a ration card, cancellation of ration cards not linked with Aadhaar, or Aadhaar-based biometric authentication failures, the RTF campaign said.

Denial of social security pensions and absence of work under the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act further contribute to the destitution of the starvation victims and their families. At least seven victims were eligible to social security pension, but were either not issued a pension or did not receive their pension due to administrative lapses or Aadhaar-related issues. Not to mention the children of these families, with poor education, negligible access to health services and employment, are staring at a bleak future.

The deaths also highlight the inadequate coverage of the Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY). Most of these families, despite living in acute poverty, did not have a AAY ration card. Prasad said,”The deaths will only increase if our demands are not paid any heed to, we have been demanding the universalisation of PDS, regular ration and increment of NREGA wages.”

Along with these concerns the Right to Food campaign has also highlighted issues of the inclusion of pulses and edible oil in PDS and doing away with the mandatory requirement of Aadhaar in welfare programmes.

The deaths of the five persons come after the government’s announcement of the Khadyan Kosh, which is now rendered as merely a token scheme. The deaths also point to the failure of the Jharkhand government exposing their lack of commitment for social security and right to food.

Courtesy: Newsclick.in
 

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Did Aadhaar Glitches Cause Half Of 14 Recent Jharkhand Starvation Deaths? https://sabrangindia.in/did-aadhaar-glitches-cause-half-14-recent-jharkhand-starvation-deaths/ Sat, 11 Aug 2018 05:02:07 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/08/11/did-aadhaar-glitches-cause-half-14-recent-jharkhand-starvation-deaths/ New Delhi: On July 27, 2018, Rajendra Birhor, a 40-year-old Adivasi, starved to death in Ramgarh, a district in eastern Jharkhand. He belonged to a “particularly vulnerable tribal group” (PVTG) and should have had access to at least two welfare measures that could have saved his life: A pension and a ration card.   Like him, 13 others […]

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New Delhi: On July 27, 2018, Rajendra Birhor, a 40-year-old Adivasi, starved to death in Ramgarh, a district in eastern Jharkhand. He belonged to a “particularly vulnerable tribal group” (PVTG) and should have had access to at least two welfare measures that could have saved his life: A pension and a ration card.

Starvation_Deaths_620
 

Like him, 13 others died of starvation in Jharkhand over the last 10 months, according to the latest available data from the Right To Food (RTF) campaign, an advocacy group. They should have all benefited from Antodyay Anna Yojana (AAY), the food ration scheme meant for the poorest of poor in India.
 
In most cases, the Jharkhand government denied that deaths were caused by starvation (You can read those denials here, here and here). The state food and supply minister Saryu Roy has accused food activists, who see a link between starvation and these deaths, of “playing politics”.

 

 

 

भूख से मौत की अफवाह फैलाने वालों की पोल आज रामगढ के कुज्जू मे खुल गई जब मृतक के पुत्र ने मुखिया एवं अन्य कई के सामने कहा कि मौत भूख से नहीं हुई है इसलिये शव को क़ब्र से निकालकर पोस्टमार्टम कराने की ज़रूरत नहीं है.यह बात उसने पहले भी कईयों के सामने कहा था जिसका वीडियो मौजूद है.

 
 

 

 

तथाकथित भूख से मरने की ख़बरों पर अफवाह उड़ाने वाले और राजनीति की रोटी सेंकने वाले बतायें कुज्जू की दुर्भाग्यपूर्ण मौत के बारे मे सरकार से क्या चाहते हैं.वे चाहें तो मृतक शरीर को क़ब्र से निकालकर सरकार पोस्टमार्टम करा देगी.दूध का दूध और पानी का पानी हो जायेगा.

 
 

 

 

भूख और मौत पर राजनीति की रोटी सेंकने वाले राजनेताओं और तथाकथित समाजकर्मियों के असली इरादे बेनक़ाब होंगे.गिरिडीह और चतरा की असलियत जांच में सामने आ गई है.फिर भी स्व० सावित्री देवी के गाँव ओछी राजनीति करनेवाले किरदारों की भूमिका की जाँच अभी कुछ दिन चलती रहेगी.

 
 

 
IndiaSpend spoke to medical experts and social activists and found that the government response does not take into account two factors involving the links between malnutrition and starvation:
 

 

  • Medically, these deaths are most likely due to infections and diseases. But prolonged malnutrition undermines the immune system, making the body prone to life-threatening infections;
  • Starvation deaths are caused by a circle of poverty, government apathy and mandatory Aadhaar-ration-card integration, the lack of which deprives poor citizens of foodgrain they are entitled to under government schemes. Over a period of time, this results in malnutrition and death.

 
As the following table shows, in half the cases of starvation deaths reported from Jharkhand between September 2017 and July 2018, the deceased did not get the ration promised under the public distribution  scheme (PDS) and AAY.
 
The reason can be traced to the complications arising from the government mandate that ration cards and bank accounts be linked to Aadhaar, according to RTF campaigners. Aadhaar is a 12-digit unique identification number issued by the Indian government to every citizen and declared mandatory for various government welfare schemes.
 

Starvation Deaths in Jharkhand, September 2017 To July 2018
  Name of victim Age (In years) Block, District Date of death Details
1 Santoshi Kumari* 11 Jaldega, Simdega Sep 28, 2017 Family denied ration for five months as its ration card was cancelled for want of a link to Aadhaar.
2 Baijnath Ravidas 40 Jharia, Dhanbad Oct 21, 2017 Despite repeated applications, the family did not get a ration card.
3 Ruplal Marandi* 60 Mohanpur, Deoghar Oct 23, 2017 Family denied ration for two months as the thumbprint of Ruplal and his daughter did not work in the Aadhaar-based biometric authentication (ABBA) point-of-sale machine.
4 Premani Kunwar* 64 Danda, Garhwa Dec 1, 2017 After September 2017, Premani’s pension was redirected to someone else’s bank account linked with her Aadhaar. Premani did not receive her ration in November 2017 even though she successfully authenticated herself through ABBA. MGNREGS work unavailable.
5 Etwariya Devi* 67 Majhiaon, Garhwa Dec 25, 2017 The family did not get ration from October to December 2017 due to ABBA failure. Etwariya’s old pension was not credited in her account in November. In December, the Common Service Point operator did not give her the pension as the internet connection was disrupted just after she authenticated through ABBA. MGNREGS work unavailable.
6 Budhni Soren 40 Tisri, Giridih Jan 13, 2018 The family was not issued a ration card (presumably as it did not have Aadhaar). Budhni Soren was also not issued a widow pension.
7 Lukhi Murmu* 30 Hiranpur, Pakur Jan 23, 2018 The family was denied its PDS rice since October 2017 due to ABBA failure. In June 2017, the family’s Antyodaya Anna Yojana card was converted into a priority ration card without its knowledge. No MGNREGS work available in the village.
8 Sarthi Mahtain* Exact age not available Dhanbad Apr-18 She was denied her ration and pension for several months as she could not go to the ration shop and bank for Aadhaar-based biometric authentication due to illness.
9 Yurai Devi Exact age not available Ramna, Garhwa May-18 Denied ration
10 Savitri Devi* 60 Dumri, Giridih Jun-18 Did not have a ration card despite having applied for it. She was sanctioned a widow pension in 2014, but the first pension instalment was transferred in her account in only April 2018 as her Aadhaar was not linked with her bank account. No MGNREGS work available in the village for the past two years.
11 Mina Musahar 45 Itkhori, Chatra Jun-18 Did not have ration card or shelter. Was forced to beg for food and was hungry for four days.
12 Chintaman Malhar 50 Mandu, Ramgarh Jun-18 Was not issued a ration card or particularly vulnerable tribal group pension. Lived in makeshift shelter. No MGNREGS work available. Lived in state of semi-starvation.
13 Lalji Mahto 70 Narayanpur, Jamtara Jul-18 Did not receive pension for the last three months
14 Rajendra Birhor 40 Mandu, Ramgarh Jul-18 Was not issued a ration card and particularly vulnerable tribal group pension.

Source: Right To Food Campaign
* Cases where Aadhaar-related failures clearly contributed to starvation
 
Compulsory linkage of Aadhaar, ration card continues, despite govt claims
 
In line with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vision of Digital India, the Jharkhand government in July 2016 transitioned to a “paperless” public distribution system (PDS), linked to individual Aadhaar numbers, as TheWire.in reported on July 18, 2017.
 
This system has two requirements: One, each person’s ration card has to be linked to their Aadhaar card; and two, each time a person wants ration under PDS, she must have biometric authentication done at a ‘point of sale’ machine, which then calculates eligibility. These machines are installed at PDS shops, where the dealer is supposed to authenticate each transaction.
 
In the two months after this Aadhaar-PDS linkage rule, in Ranchi district, ration-card holders received only 49%, or less than half, of their entitlement, according to an analysis of government data in July and August 2016 by development economist Jean Dreze.
 
The denial of foodgrain in Jharkhand has been reported before (herehere and here) and contested.
 

 

@roysaryu ‘ji, Hope you take note of the story of this elderly woman. lives in Ranchi, has & & hasn’t received her entitled grains from dealer in last . A widow with both her sons dead, she can be ‘face’ of next . @DC_Ranchi

 
 

 
In October 2017, the Jharkhand government claimed that Aadhaar is not mandatory for collecting foodgrain under PDS. However, district administrations in the state continue to adhere to the mandatory Aadhaar-ration card rule, according to RTF activists. This happened in Birhor’s case as well.
 
“Whatever the food minister or others may have told the media, the Jharkhand government never retracted its policy of compulsory linkage of ration cards with Aadhaar,” Dreze, also a visiting professor at Ranchi University, told IndiaSpend.
 
Activists are demanding that Aadhaar be delinked from all social-security schemes, including pensions, to save the poor from distress. Swati Narayan, an activist with the RTF in Ranchi, believes that the Aadhaar-ration integration requirement is behind the trail of starvation deaths in Jharkhand.
 
“The Jharkhand government needs to immediately universalise the rural ration eligibility from 86% to 100% of the population to ensure that no family is left out,” she said. “Additionally, excluded families should be immediately paid compensatory food security allowance for the last one year at least to prevent more horrific deaths due to starvation.”
 
Food and supply minister Roy insisted the 14 deaths were not related to starvation. “(They) can be attributed to the lack of ration cards, which is due to the lacunae in the government system, but they are not starvation deaths,” he told IndiaSpend. “RTF activists are hyper-ventilated (sic) people who are motivated against BJP [Bharatiya Janata Party] governments. I have not seen them commenting on the starvation deaths in Delhi.”
 
On July 27, 2018, three sisters were found dead under unexplained circumstances in Delhi’s Mandawali area. They possibly died of malnutrition or starvation, their postmortem reports said.
 
Given the inequalities in India’s population–India’s top 1% have 73% of India’s wealth–it is the government’s responsibility to provide food and nutrition to the marginalised, said Anjali Bhardwaj, an activist with the RTF in Delhi. “In Delhi and Jharkhand, the political will is lacking,” she said. “They may promise a lot of things, but on ground, the ill-thought move of PDS-Aadhaar linkage is starving people.”
 
Shamika Ravi, research director, Brookings India and a member of the Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, countered that the emphasis should be on resolving systemic problems, not discrediting Aadhaar.
 
“Any exclusion error or case, where a person is being denied their benefits, is unacceptable and absolutely unjustified,” she told IndiaSpend. “However, the focus should be on strengthening the Aadhaar system. There are exclusions, yes, but what is still not clear to me is at exactly what stage is the problem (occuring)? Is it a problem at the point of authentication? Or there is a problem in how the PDS programme is linked with Aadhaar? Aadhaar has become a favorite whipping boy of many activists, but we need to identity the exact pain points and work on strengthening them.”
 
Dreze concurs partially with Ravi. “If Aadhaar is to be used at all for welfare schemes, it should be restricted to cases where it serves a clear purpose and where Aadhaar seeding can be done in a reliable and non-coercive manner,” he said. “Aadhaar-based biometric authentication should never be made compulsory.”
 
Starvation deaths must be established by social, medical history, not autopsy: Activists
 
In June 2018, the Jharkhand government made an autopsy a must for starvation deaths. But campaigners say this is not a fail-proof method for determining if death was caused by hunger.
 
“Historically, if post-mortems/autopsies have found a single grain of rice in bodies, they haven’t been classified as starvation deaths,” said Dipa Sinha, assistant professor at Ambedkar University, Delhi.  “In Odisha, people have eaten mango kernels as they didn’t have anything else to eat. So, officially, they may not be starvation deaths medically, but I would classify them thus. In Jharkhand, the government has been hiding behind technicalities to absolve itself of responsibilities, but we cannot miss the fact that denial of food leads to chronic malnutrition.”
 
Narayan pointed out that the medical and social histories of those living in starvation zones are more important than autopsies to fix the reason for death. “After one year of screaming, the Jharkhand government has finally changed its definition of starvation, but has done little else,” she said.
 
In March 2018, the Jharkhand government set up a nine-member committee which was supposed to define parameters by which starvation deaths can be established officially. However, the committee has missed its second deadline to compile the report and make it public, as the New Indian Express reported on July 31, 2018.
 
“From what I know, the committee has analysed information and (is) almost done with its report,” Jharkhand minister Roy said. “It will release the final report very soon. However, I cannot comment on the exact date as it is an autonomous committee and they will take their own time and decisions.”
 
There is no need to set up a committee to define starvation as a lot of literature and research already exists on the subject, said NC Saxena, former secretary of the erstwhile Planning Commission and former commissioner of a Supreme Court-monitored committee on food and hunger. “In my experience, in Jharkhand, the government usually under-reports starvation and malnutrition levels,” he said. “They should rather focus their energies on collecting proper data and on how severely malnourished children and people can be identified and intervened (with).”
 
Malnutrition and infections: A two-way causal association
 
In September 2017, an 11-year-old girl Santoshi died allegedly due to starvation. She and her family did not get foodgrain because their Aadhaar cards had not being linked to ration cards. In response to criticism over Santoshi’s death, Amit Malviya, incharge of the BJP’s information technology cell, cited a district official’s report and claimed that her death was due to malaria, and not starvation.
 

View image on TwitterView image on TwitterView image on Twitter
 

11-year old girl in Jharkhand died because of malaria and not because her family was denied ration. DC’s report enclosed. Fact check anyone?

 
 

 
However, experts told IndiaSpend that malnutrition and disease are so interlinked that it is hard to separate the two. Undernourished children principally die of common infections and immune defects, according to this 2016 paper.
 
“Lack of adequate nutrition or undernutrition leads to infections which can be life-threatening,” said Bhavna Dhingra, a pediatrician with the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Bhopal. “However, these infections can reduce the appetite of children, which severely affects the already precarious nutrition situation.”
 
Giridhara R Babu, an epidemiologist and additional professor at the Public Health Foundation of India, explained how malnutrition works to weaken the body: “In the shorter term, malnutrition leads to weight loss due to depletion of fat and muscle mass, including some of the organs. In the long run, prolonged decreased dietary intake leads to a reduction in functional energy reserves and changes in body composition.”
 
Starvation itself rarely results in death which is usually caused by infections among those lacking in malnutrition, said Nehal Vaidya, a pediatrician from Bhuj, Gujarat.
 
“In case of a reported case of child malnutrition, where a child has stayed hungry for many days, first, a clinical assessment should be done to analyse the child’s body and hunger and then the appropriate intervention should be done and the parents should be counselled on how to feed the child,” she said. However, in rural and urban areas, lack of infrastructure is a big problem. You need specialist doctors, paediatricians, nutritionists and public health experts to deal with such cases.”
 
Severely malnourished children in state-run malnutrition treatment centres (MTCs) in Jharkhand showed poor recovery, most demonstrated poor weight gain, and a high number of illnesses were reported post- discharge, according to this 2018 paper which examined the efficacy of an MTC in Jharkhand. Malnourishment at an early age can have long-term consequences, affecting an individual’s motor, sensory, cognitive, social and emotional development, as IndiaSpend reported on July 22, 2017.
 
There is a 90% shortfall of specialists (surgeons, obstetricians & gynaecologists, doctors, and paediatricians) across community health centres (CHCs) in Jharkhand, according to the Rural Health Statistics 2017. Other than specialists, India is short of doctors in general. India’s doctor-to-population ratio of 1:1,674 is 75% lower than Argentina and 70% lower than the US, as IndiaSpend reported on November 16, 2016.
 
The CHCs constitute the secondary level of health care and provide specialist care to patients referred from primary health centres, four of which feed into each CHC, serving roughly 80,000 people in tribal, hill or desert areas and 120,000 on the plains.
 
(Devanik Saha is a doctoral candidate at the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, UK. He also works as consultant with Policy & Development Advisory Group, Delhi)

Courtesy: India Spend
 

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Sordid tale of starvation: How govt negligence caused deaths by hunger in Jharkhand https://sabrangindia.in/sordid-tale-starvation-how-govt-negligence-caused-deaths-hunger-jharkhand/ Thu, 26 Jul 2018 11:35:35 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/07/26/sordid-tale-starvation-how-govt-negligence-caused-deaths-hunger-jharkhand/ Even though Santoshi Kumar’s death created a nationwide stir, the on-ground realities haven’t changed. Access to the Public Distribution System is abysmal and Aadhaar based biometric machines constantly fail, often leading to poor Indians dying of hunger.   Image Courtesy: Saurav Roy/ Hindustan Times   Jharkhand: In 2017, The Jharkhand government patted their backs with […]

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Even though Santoshi Kumar’s death created a nationwide stir, the on-ground realities haven’t changed. Access to the Public Distribution System is abysmal and Aadhaar based biometric machines constantly fail, often leading to poor Indians dying of hunger.

 

Starvation Deaths

Image Courtesy: Saurav Roy/ Hindustan Times
 
Jharkhand: In 2017, The Jharkhand government patted their backs with a full-page ad for saving Rs. 225 crores and 86 crores by cancelling ‘Fake’ Aadhaar cards and old age pensions. They ended up depriving the poorest of poor of necessary food which has since resulted in many starvation deaths in the state.
 
The death of a young girl Santoshi Kumar in 2017 due to starvation had riled the country. Many did not even think it was possible to die of starvation in a country with stuffed granaries. Even though the news created a stir, the on-ground realities haven’t changed. Access to the Public Distribution System is abysmal and Aadhaar based biometric machines constantly fail, often leading to poor Indians dying of hunger.
 
The Right To Food Campaign has released many fact-finding reports with annexures which delve into the complexities of the failure of the state government in providing the right to life to its residents. It details shocking negligence and corruption to deny basic human rights to the most marginalised.
 
In a table released by the group before they held a protest on July 13, they detailed how 16 people died of starvation in the country since 2017. In states like West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand and Odisha, entitlements were denied to people consistently which led to their death by hunger.
 
Details of starvation deaths

  Name of person Age
(yr)
District (state) Caste Date of death Entitlements denied Some News items and articles Public Action Some Government action/response
1 Narayan* 55 Uttara Kannada (Karnataka) Dalit
 
2 Jul 2017 The brothers’ family was denied ration for six months preceding their death. Their ration card was deleted as it was not linked with Aadhaar.  Scroll (Aarefa Johari) PPT based on fact finding
PUCL Report
 
2 Subbu* 52 8 Jul 2017
3 Venkatrama* 46 13 Jul 2017
4 Santoshi Kumari* 11 Simdega
(Jharkhand)
Dalit 28 Sep 2017 Santoshi’s family was denied ration for six months preceding her death. Its ration card was deleted as it was not linked with an Aadhaar.  Scroll (Aarefa Johari)
Scroll (Jean Drèze)
NDTV
Indian Express (Prashant Pandey)
वायर हिन्दी (नीरज सिन्हा)
बीबीसी हिन्दी (रवि प्रकाश)
न्यूज़लौंड्री (स्टैलिन के)
वायर हिन्दी
RTFC Jharkhand’s statement
RTFC Jharkhand’s letter to UIDAI (UIDAI’s response)
Question in Rajya Sabha
Press conference on 9 December 2017
Food Ministry orders probe in the death
5 Bilas Singh 30 Jajpur (Odisha)   17 Oct 2017 Her husband said that she did not receive any medical assistance although he had contacted the local ASHA, ANM and anganwadi worker. Odisha labourer alleges wife’s death to starvation (New Indian Express, 18 October 2017)
 
   
6 Baijnath Ravidas 40 Dhanbad (Jharkhand) Dalit 21 Oct 2017 Despite repeated applications, Ravidas’s family was not issued a ration card. वायर हिन्दी
स्थानीय हिन्दी अखबार
Report of fact finding by HRLN  
7 Ruplal Marandi* 60 Deoghar (Jharkhand) Adivasi 23 Oct 2017 Ruplal’s family was denied its ration for two months as it could not prove its identity through ABBA. वायर हिन्दी RTFC Jharkhand’s statement
 
Report of fact finding by HRLN
 
8 Lalita Kunwar 45 Garhwa (Jharkhand) Adivasi Oct 2017 Lalita’s family was denied ration for six months preceding her death. स्थानीय हिन्दी अखबार    
9 Sakina Ashfaq* 50 Bareilly (UP) Muslim 14 Nov 2017 Sakina’s family was denied its ration as she could not go to the ration shop for ABBA due to illness. Indian Express (Amit Sharma)
Millli Gazette (Avinash Pandey)
लाईव सिटीज़ (रणजीत झा)
  Press release by Food Ministry
10 Premani Kunwar* 64 Garhwa (Jharkhand) OBC 1 Dec 2017 After Sep 2017, Premani’s social security pension was redirected to someone else’s bank account linked with her Aadhaar. She did not receive her ration in Nov 2017 even though she successfully authenticated herself.  Scroll
The Wire
Telegraph
Moneylife
Newsclick
Report of RTFC Jh fact finding on 7 Dec
 
Report of RTFC Jh fact finding on 21-22 Dec
 
RTFC Jharkhand’s statement
 
(Report of UIDAI’s inquiry)
 
11 Etwariya Devi* 67 Garhwa
(Jharkhand)
OBC 25 Dec 2017 Etwariya’s family was denied its ration due to ABBA failure. In Dec 2017 she did not receive her pension, allegedly due to authentication failure.  Scroll
The Wire
Counterview
Hindustan Times

 
Report of RTFC Jharkhand’s fact finding team
 
RTFC Jharkhand’s statement
 
12 Nemchandra 42 Bareilly (Uttar Pradesh)   4 Jan 2018 Details not available about 82-year-old mother’s pension. Family sold Antyodaya rations to buy medicines. Hindustan Times    
13 Budhni Soren 40 Giridih
(Jharkhand)
Adivasi 13 Jan 2018 Budhni was not issued a ration card (possibly as she did not have Aadhaar). She was not issued a widow pension.  Enewsroom (Shahnawaz Akhtar)
Indian Express (Prashant Pandey)
Times of India (Jaideep Deogharia)
प्रभात खबर
   
14 Lukhi Murmu* 30 Pakur (Jharkhand) Adivasi 23 Jan 2018 Lukhi’s family was denied ration since Oct 2017 due to ABBA failure. Counterview
Scroll (Aarefa Johari)
The Wire (Gaurav Vivek Bhatnagar)
New Indian Express (Anand ST Das)
प्रभात खबर
News 18 हिंदी
हिंदुस्तान 
RTFC Jharkhand’s statement
 
Report of fact finding team
Deputy Commissioner’s report on the death
15 Amir Jahan 36 Moradabad (UP) Muslim 25 Jan 2018 Amir’s family was not issued a ration card.  Telegraph (Piyush Srivastava)
DNA
पत्रिका (कौशलेन्द्र पाठक)
Report of the RTFC fact finding team  
16 Surath Kumar Gayen* 63 Bhatpara (West Bengal)    24 Mar
2018
His family stopped receiving ration after its ration card was missed in a digitization drive in 2017. He did not get old age pension as he did not have Aadhaar.   Report of Right to Food and Work Campaign, West Bengal fact finding team  
17 Sarthi Mahtain*   Dhanbad
(Jharkhand)
  29 Apr 2018 Sarthi was denied her ration and pension as she could not go to the ration shop or bank for ABBA due to illness. हिन्द खबर    
18 Savitri Devi Mahato* 55 Giridih
(Jharkhand)
OBC 2 Jun 2018 Savitri’s family was not issued a ration card. She did not receive her pension as her account was not linked with Aadhaar. NDTV
Hindustan Times
Enewsroom
दैनिक भास्कर
News 18 हिन्दी
हिन्दी वायर
दैनिक जागरण  
Report of the RTFC fact finding team
 
Report of HRLN fact finding team
Jharkhand government orders probe in the death
 
Additional Collector’s report (page 1 and page 2)
19 Mina Musahar 45 Chatra (Jharkhand) Dalit 4 Jun 2018 Neither Mina nor her son’s family was not issued a AAY ration card.  दैनिक जागरण
वायर हिन्दी  
Report of the fact finding team Denial of starvation as the cause of death
Post-mortem report not released
20 Kunduru Nag 65 Bargarh
(Odisha)
OBC 11 Jun 2018 Kunduru and her husband were denied ration as they could not walk till the Panchayat Bhavan. Scroll (Priya Ranjan Sahu)
Orissa Post (Priya Ranjan Sahu)
Orissa Post
Report of the fact finding team  
21 Chintaman Malhar 40 Ramgarh (Jharkhand) Dalit 14 Jun 2018 Chintaman’s family was not issued a ration card. The entire village was also deprived of rations, pensions and other basic entitlements. Scroll (Swati Narayan)
New Indian Express
New Indian Express (Mukesh Ranjan)
Times of India (NK Agarwal and Jaideep Deogharia)
The Logical Indian
RTFC fact finding report
 
NAPM  fact finding report
 
22 Rajwati* 60 Bareilly (Uttar Pradesh)   5 July 2018 The mother and daughter committed suicide due to economic hardships. Their ration card was cancelled as they did not have Aadhaar. प्रभात खबर
ज़ी न्यूज़
नवभारत टाइम्स
जागरण
APB न्यूज़  
EENADU India हिंदी
   
23 Rani* 25
24 Lalji Mahto 70 Jamtara (Jharkhand)   10 July He did not receive his pension for the past three months जागरण    

*Cases where Aadhaar-related failures clearly contributed to starvation.

 
The process of justice has been slow and the people responsible for this negligence and crime have not been arrested, much less fired.
 
The stories of many victims of Jharkhand are eerily similar.
 
On 23 January 2018, 30-year-old Lukhi Murmu of Dhawadangal village of Hiranpur block in Pakur (Jharkhand) succumbed to prolonged undernutrition and exhaustion. She lived with her 14-year old sister Phulin in extreme poverty. Their meals usually comprised solely of rice and they even had to sleep hungry at times. The sisters’ deprivation worsened over the last four months when they were unable to access their ration from the Public Distribution System (PDS) due to Aadhaar-based biometric authentication failure.
 
Etwariya Devi, a 67-year-old widow, passed away on 25 December. She did not get sufficient food and nutrition over a long period of time. She used to live with her son Ghura Vishwakarma, daughter-in-law Usha Devi and their children. The family routinely faced a shortage of food and nutrition. None of the members of the family ate on the night of 24 December as there was no grain in the house. The family was denied ration from October to December 2017 and she did not get her pension for the months of November and December.
 
Ruplal Marandi, a 62-year old villager of Bhagwanpur in Mohanpur block of Deoghar district in Jharkhand, died of hunger on 23 October 2017 (though the investigating team of the BDO Ashok Kumar and accompanying Doctor have declared it a natural death and denied possibilities of post-mortem.) The deceased was living with his daughter Manodi Marandi and daughter-in-law. According to Manodi, “there was not a single grain to eat at home”, and they did not receive any rice from the rations shop in the past two months (September and October). The ration dealer, Dharmdev Choudhary, refused to give ration because the fingerprint was not working in the biometric machine.
 
A 64-year old widow, Premani Kunwar, died of hunger and exhaustion on 1 December in Danda Block of Garhwa district (Jharkhand). Till September 2017, she received her old age pension in her State Bank of India (SBI) account in Danda branch. Thereafter, without her knowledge, her pension amount was redirected to the SBI bank account of Shanti Devi in Piprakala branch (22 km from Danda). Shanti Devi, who died 25 years ago, was the first wife of Premani Kunwar’s husband late Mutur Mahto. Following the release of the fact-finding report on Premani Kunwar’s death by the Right to Food Campaign, UIDAI conducted an inquiry on 8 December. Its report acknowledges that Premani Kunwar’s old age pension had indeed been credited to Shanti Devi’s account which was linked with Premani Kunwar’s Aadhaar on 10 October 2017. The report also acknowledges that Premani Kunwar did not receive her ration for the month of November 2017, even though the dealer authenticated her biometrics in the POS machine for that month and also made an entry of 35kgs in her ration card. The issue of denial of ration was discussed at length in an earlier press release of the Right to Food Campaign on 7 December 2017.
 
Recently in June, 58-year-old Shanti Devi succumbed to hunger in Jharkhand because her ration card was not processed. All the borrowed rice she and her two daughters-in-law had procured was not enough for the family of five including three children. Her two sons, working in different states, were unable to earn any money that could be sent home for six months. After surviving on a little bit of rice and its starch, she allegedly breathed her last on Sunday after not having eaten for three days.
 
Following the hunger death of Santoshi Kumar in Simdega in September 2017, the Food Ministry issued a notification which states that even in case of failure of biometric authentication or lack of Aadhaar, ration dealers to give PDS rations to eligible households. The Food Ministry and UIDAI keep referring to this notification to claim that no one now denied of their entitlements due to Aadhaar. However, on the ground large-scale exclusion from public services continues due to Aadhaar. It may be recalled that last month a woman of Garhwa also died due to hunger and exhaustion as her household could not access its PDS ration to biometric authentication failures. The repeated denial of food entitlements in Jharkhand’s PDS also exposes the lack of seriousness in the state government towards addressing the issues in the delivery of ration.
 
How the systems deliberately worked against them-
 
1.  Lukhi Murmu constantly denied ration due to biometric failure
 
Lukhi Murmu’s household was issued an Antyodaya ration card under the National Food Security Act. In around June 2017, this ration card was converted into the “Priority” category without the family’s knowledge. This reduced her household’s monthly grain entitlement by 15 kg (the ration card also includes names of two of their other sisters). The household did not receive any PDS foodgrains since October 2017. Lukhi Murmu was too weak to go to the ration shop, which is about a kilometre away from their house. Phulin went to the ration shop a few times, including the day her sister died, but always returned empty handed as she was unable to authenticate herself in the ePOS machine. One of their other sisters also went to the ration shop once, but the dealer did not give her any rice too (only Lukhi Murmu and Phulin’s Aadhaar number is seeded with their ration card, and not the other two sisters’).
 
The Deputy Commissioner’s report argues that Lukhi Murmu could not have died of hunger as she had some land, two cows and paddy in her house at the time of her death. Lukhi Murmu did possess these assets, but that does not preclude her death due to starvation. Government officials argue that the family could have sold its land, cattle or paddy for food. However, the deterioration in Lukhi Murmu’s condition was gradual and there was no way for her family to predict her death.  
 
As per the ration dealer’s testimony to the local administration, no one from Lukhi Murmu’s household came to the PDS shop in the last four months. However, to the Right to Food Campaign fact-finding team, the dealer admitted that Phulin came to collect her household’s rations but was turned away due to biometric authentication failure. Local officials claim to have given instructions to all the dealers in Pakur to also give PDS rations to households that are unable to authenticate themselves through Aadhaar. However, the dealer claimed to have not received any such instruction.
 
2.  Etwariya Devi denied ration due to machine failure and denied pension
 
Etwariya Devi’s family not own any land, except a small piece of land on which their dilapidated kutcha house stands. Ghura Vishwakarma works as an unskilled labourer under contractors in other states. Usha Devi works as an unskilled labourer in local agricultural works. The family routinely faced a shortage of food and nutrition. None of the members of the family ate on the night of 24 December as there was no grain in the house.
 
The family was heavily dependent on 25 kg grains, entitled under the Priority Household card under National Food Security Act. It did not get ration in October, November and December (till the death of Etwariya). In October, Usha Devi’s (who collected the ration every month on behalf of the family) fingerprint did not work in the POS machine. In November, the dealer said that he had not been allotted grain for that month and in December, the dealer said that the POS machine was not working and had to be repaired. In the last three months, the shortage of food was severe for the family.
 
Etwariya was a pensioner under the Indira Gandhi Old Age Pension Scheme. She last received her pension from the local Pragya Kendra in October. Pension amount of Rs. 600 was credited in her account on 7 December. She went to the Kendra on 4 December and a transaction of Rs. 503 was made in her account. According to the CSP Anil Chowdhary, the internet connectivity broke right after she authenticated her fingerprint and the money was not credited to the CSP’s account. As a result, he did not give her the money. Similarly, on 8 December, a transaction of Rs. 600 was made, but she was not given the money as the internet connection again broke. The CSP claims to have received the money in his account on 19 December. When asked why did not give the money to Etwariya before 25 December, he said that she did not visit the Kendra again. The CSP deposited Rs. 1200 back in her account on 26 December.
 
In the morning of 25 December, Etwariya Devi saw the dealer cross in front of their house and she went after him shouting “ruka na dealer babu”, but the dealer did not stop. Another person of the dealer’s household was also crossing and he stopped after hearing Etwariya’s shouts. She asked him to give her the ration (“rationiya da na babu”), but he said that she would get grains the next day. The dealer visited their house on 25 December after Etwariya passed away and gave 30kg of rice to the family. On 27 December, Usha Devi got 30 kg rice after she authenticated her thumbprint in the POS machine, but the transaction was made for 50 kg. The dealer also transacted 5 litre kerosene oil on her card, but she did not get oil. She said the family did not have any kerosene oil when Etwariya died and they had to keep the body in the dark for the whole night of 24 December.
 
People said that the dealer did not distribute ration in August 2017. As per the dealer, he was not allotted any grain for that month. They also said that the dealer did not distribute ration as per the transaction made in the POS machine. In October, he had transacted twice the monthly entitlement of grains and kerosene on most of the cards, but had distributed ration and oil only for a month. Many people complained that they did not get ration in November. Similarly, in December too, the dealer transacted twice the monthly entitlement of grains and kerosene on most of the cards, but distributed only half of it (corroborated by the online transaction list for October and December). The people also said that the dealer did not give the printed receipt to cardholders and cut 400-500 grams from each person’s monthly entitlement.
 
3.   Ruplal Marandi denied ration as machine failed to authenticate fingerprints.
 
Ruplal Marandi lived with his daughter Manodi Marandi and daughter-in-law. According to Manodi, “there was not a single grain to eat at home”, and they did not receive any rice from the rations shop in the past two months (September and October). The ration dealer, Dharmdev Choudhary, refused to give ration because the fingerprint was not working in the biometric machine.

Whatever Manodi and the daughter-in-law earned from daily wages was the only means of living. For the past many days, they did not get any work because of Diwali and the incessant rain, and there was no single rupee at home. For two days the family did not light the hearth because they had nothing to cook. There was some puffed rice (mudhi) at home, which the family was surviving on. Ruplal’s condition deteriorated with hunger and he died.

4.   Premani Kunwar denied ration even after biometric authentication and her pension was redirected

The bare two-room dilapidated kutcha house of Premani Kunwar stands witness to her death amidst abject poverty. In the absence of PDS grain, she had to borrow rice from her neighbours to survive. There is no doubt that Premani lived in a state of semi-starvation. It is now well established that she did not receive her grain entitlement for August and November and her pension for September and October. Premani’s death is a grim reminder of how vulnerable people like her routinely experience uncertainties in accessing their lifelines owing to complex systems like Aadhaar. Premani Kunwar’s son, Uttam Mahto has clearly testified in a video as well as a written statement that his mother died due to starvation. However, as per the report of the Block Development Officer of Danda, Uttam Mahto testified to his mother’s death due to illness. This exposes the local administration’s attempt to cover up the actual cause of Premani Kunwar’s death.

Further, the administration lodged complaints against the local whistle-blowers who drew attention to Premani Kunwar’s death due to starvation. It filed FIRs against Birendra Chowdhary, Pramukh of Danda, Kalicharan Mahto and Sushma Mahto for “causing disruption of a government inquiry and for instilling fear in the government inquiry team”. It is also alleged that they tore government documents in the process which the defendants have denied.

According to a news report published in the Economic Times on 23 December, as per the report of the local police, Premani Kunwar, along with her youngest step-son, Sunil Mahto had “fudged her Aadhaar card” to avail Shanti Devi’s family pension. Shanti Devi’s account was being credited with a monthly family pension amount of Rs. 849 from the Coal Mines Provident Fund. As per the report submitted by the Branch Manager of Piprakala to the Inspector of Garhwa Police Station, Shanti Devi’s account was operated by Premani Kunwar and her family members. It further states that a sum of Rs. 30,000 was withdrawn in the name of Shanti Devi on 6 November 2017. The police arrested Sunil Mahto on 13 December for this withdrawal.

The reports of UIDAI and Economic Times leave many pertinent questions unanswered. As per the UIDAI report, the name in Premani Kunwar’s Aadhaar (UID no XXXXXXXX7606) was changed to “Shanti Devi” on 23 September 2015. This report fails to explain how, despite this change, Premani Kunwar continued to receive her pension in her Aadhaar linked bank account till September 2017. There is also no explanation of how a bank account could be opened in the name of Shanti Devi in 2007, given that she died over two decades ago. The KYC of Shanti Devi’s account was last updated on 7 December, just a day before the UIDAI team’s visit. This draws suspicion on the complicity of bank functionaries, among others, in the fraudulent withdrawal of money from this account. The bank manager of the Piprakala branch of SBI refused to share with the Right to Food Campaign fact-finding team the KYC documents that were used to open Shanti Devi’s account. There is also no explanation from UIDAI on how UID no XXXXXXXX7606 was linked with bank account numbers of Premani Kunwar as well as Shanti Devi.

These issues highlight the vulnerability of the Aadhaar-bank integration system. Recently, a massive scam of opening Aadhaar-linked Airtel payment bank accounts of Airtel network subscribers without their consent was unearthed. In 2016, ICICI Bank opened accounts of around 6000 NREGA workers in Boram block of East Singhbhum district without their consent and linked them to their Aadhaar. Shell accounts have been used to siphon off NREGA wages, as a recent investigation in Mahuadanr Block (Latehar district, Jharkhand) revealed. A Member of Parliament also recently became a victim of fraudulent withdrawal after fraudsters used the OTP sent to the MP’s mobile to authenticate Aadhaar-based online transfer of fund.

No Food Security or accountability in this country-
Improper implementation of the National Food Security Act and frequent failure of the complex Aadhaar-based biometric authentication (ABBA) system in the PDS are depriving many poor families of food rations that are essential for their food security. The facts indicate that all these deaths are hunger and undernutrition deaths, but the Government is denying this and citing other causes. This is a camouflage of the government departments to disown responsibility and avoid accountability.

As in the cases of previous deaths due to starvation in Jharkhand, the government has denied the role of Aadhaar integration with welfare programmes or administrative lapses that led to the denial of entitlements. It has instead been harassing the surviving members of the families suffering from starvation.

Disruptions in the delivery of ration and pension in Jharkhand continue unabated. For those living on the margins, denial of such crucial entitlements leads to the violation of mere right to life.
 
Right to Food Campaign Jharkhand condemned this response and demanded that:

  • The State Government must take concrete actions for the enactment of all Supreme Court orders on the right to food.
  • The State Government must clarify about the orders which deny ration on account of Aadhar seeding and biometrics, and the government should release a white paper to reveal how many people in the state are denied ration due to these reasons.
  • If any unconstitutional order is passed by any Government Officer on these processes, such officers must be held accountable for the same and the Government should take strict against such officers.
  • The faulty Aadhar and biometric system in the PDS, which denies food to large numbers of poor and hungry people, must be corrected immediately.
  • Immediate dismissal of the ration dealer of Sonpurwa and registering FIR against him for embezzlement of PDS grain and tampering of PDS records.
  • Immediate shift to “offline” delivery of PDS entitlements.
  • Transfer of all ration shop licenses from private dealers to Gram Panchayats or self-help groups.
  •  Introduction of pulses and edible oil in the PDS.

“More children under the age of five die in India than anywhere else in the world. A recent estimate puts this figure at over 1.5 million children a year—over 4,500 child deaths a day. A third of these could have been averted if children did not go to bed hungry night after night. These figures suggest that over 3,00,000 children die every year in India because of hunger. And for many children who escape death, the poverty of their parents means that hunger remains an unremitting part of their lives. Hunger does not stunt only the body, it also affects the brain. The result: An entire generation of children born into poverty with stunted intellectual development which traps them in the same poverty their parents lived with. A state of poverty which will ultimately kill them well before their fellow citizens who did not go hungry during childhood,” wrote Vikram Patel, a Pershing Square Professor of Global Health at Harvard Medical School and affiliated with the Public Health Foundation of India and Sangath.
 
“While it is plausible that the middle-aged people in desperate situations in Jharkhand and elsewhere did not die of acute starvation, it is more likely that their premature deaths were written into the scripts of their lives because they starved as children. It does not matter how fast our economy is growing when tens of millions of our children (and their families) go to bed hungry. Stunting due to hunger and its consequences on premature mortality is a major reason for the pathetic position India occupies in the human development league table of the world. It is also holding back the prospects of an entire generation of our children to survive and escape poverty. That it should be so prevalent, 70 years after Independence and with our food granaries stuffed, is nothing short of a national shame. As many other and much poorer countries have shown, eradicating hunger and stunting can be addressed but to do so will need action on an emergency scale. Only then will Indians stop dying of hunger,” he wrote in The Indian Express.
 
This report is a compilation of RTFC’s reports on different starvation cases. It has been edited for relevance.

Read Also : https://sabrangindia.in/article/savitri-devi-one-more-name-added-starvation-death-toll-jharkhand
 

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