- Pankhuri Yadav
- TNNUpdated: Nov 10, 2020, 08:34 IST IST
Covid restrictions had the biggest impact on the urban poor leaving them vulnerable to infection and financial uncertainty
"We hadn’t been able to save much after working for two decades,” said Ruksar Bano. “We spent some money on a second-hand sofa set and a bicycle for my son. Now there’s no sofa and no bicycle. We sold them to make ends meet.” The 52-year-old domestic worker and her husband, a scrap dealer, were hit hard by the Covid-19 pandemic. Between the two of them, they earned just enough to keep the family of five going. The lockdown killed their income, and they have ended up owing small sums to friends. They are still struggling; Bano has fewer houses that use her services and her husband’s business is yet to reach normalcy.
While the coronavirus has left many Indians jobless or facing financial trials, the urban poor, like Bano’s family have, as a class, been left reeling, their prospects shattered, the dream of educated children ushering in a brighter future now uncertain. Ramkumari, for instance, is at her wit’s end after her husband died of the virus, leaving to fend for her children and herself.
While the coronavirus has left many Indians jobless or facing financial trials, the urban poor, like Bano’s family have, as a class, been left reeling, their prospects shattered, the dream of educated children ushering in a brighter future now uncertain. Ramkumari, for instance, is at her wit’s end after her husband died of the virus, leaving to fend for her children and herself.