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 Despite violence, Uttar Pradesh and Bihar migration may continue



A well-established internal migration chain that pushes millions from Uttar
Pradesh and Bihar to all parts of India in search of livelihood is unlikely
to halt because of Raj Thackeray.



Every year, hundreds of thousands make their way to their adopted homes in
places like Mumbai, Delhi, Ludhiana, Noida, Ahmedabad, Chandigarh and many
more towns. But they never forget their bonds to their home states.



A few hundred may have returned to their homes following violence in
Maharashtra directed against migrants from Bihar and Uttar Pradesh —
instigated by virulent statements from Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS)
leader Raj Thackeray — but that is unlikely to change the migration pattern
from these states.



Extreme poverty, lack of jobs, illiteracy and other factors force the
migrants from Bihar and Uttar Pradesh to move to other parts of India.
Although no official figures of migration from Uttar Pradesh are available,
unofficial estimates place mass movement to Maharashtra, particularly to
Mumbai, to the tune of 5-6 million.



About 3.5 million are believed to be working in Mumbai, India's financial
and entertainment capital, says Lucknow University professor Arvind Mohan.
Figures of migration from Bihar too run into millions but no exact figures
are available with the government.



"The government has decided to conduct a survey to know the extent of
migration," deputy chief minister Sushil Kumar Modi said. The migration
trend has been there in Bihar for several decades, but it picked up in the
1980s.



An officially accepted fact in Bihar is that there is hardly a household
without one or two members who have not migrated outside for jobs or
education. In fact, both the census and National Sample Survey (NSS) reports
suggest that Bihar has the highest rate of gross inter-state out-migration
in India.



Mr Modi said that it is estimated that nearly five million from Bihar
migrate in search of livelihood — from petty jobs to small businesses — to
all parts of India. "It is a big chunk of human resource," he pointed out.



"The migrants go to all parts — from Jammu and Kashmir to Pondicherry, from
Kerala to Goa. Their favourite places are metros like Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata
and Bangalore or industrial hubs like Surat, Ahmedabad, Ludhiana and
Jalandhar. The overcrowded Delhi-bound trains tell the story of migration
from Bihar," a labour department official from the state said.



In Delhi and surrounding areas, nearly one million Biharis are believed to
be working in different sectors — as construction workers, rickshaw pullers,
auto-rickshaw drivers and of course also in multinationals. In Mumbai,
migrants dominate sectors like pharmaceuticals, security services, real
estate and dairy in various capacities.



A study by Mumbai-based NGO Bihari Front found that Biharis own four major
Mumbai based pharmaceutical companies and two major security agencies.
Together they employ at least 25,000 people, mostly migrants. Many Biharis
in Mumbai drive taxis, are into gem processing and sell 'bhelpuri'.



On an average, 1,000 money orders are sent from Noida, adjoining Delhi, to
Bihar every day. Economy is the main reason people from Bihar and Uttar
Pradesh migrate. At least 22 million of Uttar Pradesh's 170 million people
are unemployed. "No state government seems to have done anything concrete to
generate remunerative employment," points out former Lucknow University vice
chancellor Roop Rekha Verma, a well-known social activist.

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economictimes.indiatimes.com/PoliticsNation/UP_Bihar_migration_may_continue/articleshow/2802959





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