User:YugaYatri

Ground Zero - In-depth reportage from The Hindu

The lost tribe of Odisha

''Nineteen Juang tribal children have died in the last three months due to acute malnutrition-related diseases in inaccessible hamlets atop the Nagada hills, in Odisha’s Jajpur district. A public outcry has forced the State government to finally sit up and take notice, finds Prafulla Das''

Kusumuli Pradhan cannot quite remember the date she lost her son. She recalls it was sometime in the third week of June and four-year-old Charan was running a high temperature. There were rashes on his small frame. Kusumuli gathered him in her arms and walked 27 km to the Tata Steel hospital. After watching 10 children die in her hamlet in the past few months, Kusumuli was in a hurry to knock on the hospital door.

The thirty-something Juang tribal woman, however, brought the child home after a day of observation in the hospital. Three days later, Charan died. There was no one to advise Kusumuli to get her child admitted to the hospital just as no health administrator had bothered to inform her about the importance of getting her children inoculated against life-threatening diseases. Kusumuli buried her son close to her hut as her neighbours had done before her. “We make do with whatever we grow near our home and sell our forest produce to buy rice,” says the grieving Kusumuli. The particular variety of root she plucks is used in brewing a traditional rice beer, Handia, which Kusumuli sells at the Chingudipal gram panchayat headquarters 20 km away from her hamlet.

The Juangs of Nagada go to the Tata Steel hospital in Kaliapani, set up to cater to the needs of its employees at the Sukinda chromite mine. The doctor on duty is attending to two girls — Manasi and Rebati, both acutely malnourished. Each day they are weighed. For Kusumuli this was the nearest she could rush her son to. The government-run public health centre is 36 km away in Kuhika. The community health centre at Sukinda is 46 km away and the district hospital is 110 km away.

Charan’s death had taken the toll of infants who had died in Nagada to 19 in three months. The Naveen Patnaik government woke up to the news after two local newspapers, Samaja and Sambad, broke the story and local television amplified it.

The administration wakes up

Tents were soon pitched and cots were taken up the hills for the officials to stay. Medicines, food material for new mini-makeshift Anganwadis and government staff, solar lights, water filters and saplings of nutritious fruits and vegetables were making their slow climb. Close to 50 officials are posted here and work on a rotation basis.

There is one permanent Anganwadi in the foothills of Nagada, under the charge of Satyabhama Dehuri. Her job is confined to supplying packets of nutritional chhatua, a mix of Bengal gram, wheat, peanut and sugar, to the villagers whenever they come down. The Anganwadi worker is not only required to weigh children but also administer nutritional food to them and ideally should have been located at the top of the Nagada hills.

Twenty-two undernourished children, all aged under six, from Nagada and Guhiasala villages were admitted to the Tata Steel hospital following the visit of the officials. Most of these children returned to their hamlets after medical treatment when medical teams started reaching the hamlets. The infants were kept in the hospital for a week — their condition closely monitored as most of them had malaria and chest congestion and were suffering from acute malnutrition. They survived.

Deaths on account of malnutrition are not an admission health officials like to make on record. The exact reasons for the young children’s deaths will never be known as the parents quickly buried their little ones. The two deaths registered in the Tata Steel hospital have been put down to “malaria and protein-energy malnutrition”, says Chief District Medical Officer of Jajpur Phanindra Kumar Panigrahi.

As photographs in newspapers and visuals on television channels kept the focus on Nagada, the opposition Congress, Bharatiya Janata Party and others started visiting Nagada; the government responded by setting a field-level task force and a State-level monitoring committee to keep a close watch.

To any visitor, including this reporter, the children and adults in the hamlets appear in feeble health. Their one-room huts empty barring a few pieces of clothing, few kilos of ration rice and some maize they grew near their home.

Although officials remain tight-lipped about the prevalence of acute malnutrition among children under five years of age, an official survey by the State Women and Child Development Department found that 44 children in the age group of six months to five years were suffering from malnutrition in the seven hamlets atop the hills, and nine more such children had been identified in Ashokjhar, another Juang hamlet situated in the foothills. As many as 24 of these 53 children are suffering from severe acute malnutrition (SAM) and the remaining are suffering from moderate acute malnutrition (MAM). The SAM and MAM status of children are known by measurement of upper arm muscles along with body weight. These undernourished children are now being provided nutritious food and treatment at their homes by the doctors camping there and being monitored.

A history of neglect

Odisha has 62 tribes, the highest number among all States and Union Territories in the country, accounting for 22.85 per cent of the total population as per 2011 census. As many as 13 of these tribes have been identified as Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs), living in over 500 habitations of the State but mostly in hamlets inside the forested hills across Odisha. The Juang tribe is one of the PVTGs that belong to the Munda ethnic group and live in Keonjhar, Dhenkanal, Angul and Jajpur districts of Odisha and speak the Juang language, which is accepted as a branch of the greater Austroasiatic language family. Those who come down the hills at regular intervals have picked up Odia.

It was to bring the Juangs into the mainstream that the Juang Development Agency (JDA) was established in 1975, with its headquarters in Gonasika Hills in Keonjhar district. Even after four decades have elapsed, the agency has not been able to go beyond the Juangs of Keonjhar, operating in 35 villages in six gram panchayats of Banspal block of Keonjhar. In fact, around 20 more villages in that block are yet to be covered. Many other Juang-dominated villages in Harichandanpur block of Keonjhar, Kankadahad block of Dhenkanal have remained outside the purview of the JDA all these decades. As do the hamlets on the Nagada hills. They are inaccessible by road — there is only one way to get there, and that is by foot.

The tragedy at Nagada involving the Juang tribe exposes the government’s apathy towards the PVTGs, but this is not for the first time that malnutrition-related deaths have stalked the tribal children. In 2013, several malnourished Paudi Bhuyan tribal children had allegedly died of diseases caused by acute malnutrition in Lahunipara block of Sundargarh district, over 200 km away from Nagada. Though the exact number of deaths is not available in the official records, a food rights activist claims that about 15 deaths were reported from different villages in Lahunipara. Many deaths of undernourished children in hilltop tribal hamlets in the interiors go unreported as they remain inaccessible. Following media reports about acute malnutrition among Paudi Bhuyan children, the State Women and Child Development Department, in consultation with Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribes, health and family welfare, rural development and panchayati raj departments, had prepared a guideline for a convergent health and nutrition plan to address the health and nutritional needs of PVTGs in the State. An official survey that time detected that as many as 195 children belonging to Paudi Bhuyan tribe were suffering from severe malnutrition in Lahunipara.

The Nagada deaths raise questions on the efficiency of plans and schemes launched for the welfare of tribals living in inaccessible areas, including the Nutrition Operational Plan that was drawn up in 2009 to accelerate the pace of underweight reduction in Odisha. About 38 per cent of children in the State are stunted, its prevalence highest at about 46 per cent among tribal children.

As nutrition needs of the PVTGs remain unaddressed with the failure to ensure road connectivity to their habitations, the government has also failed to bring them under the ambit of the National Food Security Act. Though ration cards had been issued to a majority of these tribals, Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY) cards elude many of them despite a standing order of the Supreme Court that “ that all households belonging to six priority groups, one of them PVTGs, would be entitled to AAY cards”.

“It is not geographical isolation alone, but exclusion of the tribals from many government programmes that has made hundreds of children suffer from acute undernourishment in Odisha. A coordinated approach by different government departments is the need of the hour to bring all PVTGs living atop forested hills in the State under the welfare programmes,” says Rajkishor Mishra, State Adviser to the Commissioners of the Supreme Court.

It has taken 19 deaths for officials to now admit that the Juang people in the hamlets atop Nagada hills — Tala Nagada, Majhi Nagada, Upara Nagada, Tumuni, Naliadaba, Guhiasala and Taladiha — were deprived of basic facilities such as drinking water, primary health care, electricity, and primary education available under various Central and State schemes due to lack of road connectivity. There is not a single well in these hamlets and they depend on forest streams for water throughout the year.

Tala Nagada hamlet, the biggest of the seven hamlets with a population of 162, alone reported as many as 15 child deaths. Many residents in these hamlets do not have even voter IDs and job cards under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme. None of the families have been given land rights under the Forest Rights Act.

The able men and women of these hamlets climb down the hills and walk down 20 km at least once a month to buy ration rice from the gram panchayat office at Chingudipal or anything from the weekly haat (market) near Kaliapani. Rice and salt is their staple. Since the quantum of ration rice is never sufficient for their families, they eat boiled wild tuber that they collect from the forest as dinner.

The only initiative to provide informal education to children had begun in Nagada in November last year when Aspire, a non-governmental organisation, started a non-residential bridge course for 100 children, with financial support from Tata Steel Rural Development Society.

CSR funds from the mining companies operating in nearby areas in the district since long, however, had not been utilised for the benefit of people of Nagada who live just few miles away. Some of these companies are supporting the Aahar outlets being run by the State government in district headquarters, towns and cities.

The last time a block development officer (BDO) of Sukinda visited Nagada to convince the tribals to leave the hills to be rehabilitated on the plains was in 2013, says Dharmendra Kumar Sahoo, the local gram panchayat extension officer camping at Nagada. Mr. Sahoo, who claims that he accompanied the then BDO that time, says that the residents were in no mood to leave their habitat.

On the road to hope

After Odisha Women and Child Development Minister Usha Devi’s comment that the Juangs lack awareness attracted criticism from the public and the Opposition, the State administration is working overtime to build roads to Nagada using Integrated Action Plan funds by involving the Forest and Rural Development departments. Senior bureaucrats are drawing up plans to build roads from the Jajpur as well as Dhenkanal sides.

In the meanwhile, officers and employees of almost all departments of the government have reached Nagada by climbing with great difficulty. Efforts are on to provide health care and sanitation facilities, and supply free food to children at four newly-set-up mini Anganwadis. Officials have even created two WhatsApp groups among themselves to monitor the delivery of services at Nagada on a regular basis.

Further, an initiative has been taken to identify all inaccessible tribal hamlets across the State by assimilating information being collected from the district administrations and using remote sensing data from Odisha Space Applications Centre.

Virtually admitting to the lapses on the part of his government after opposition parties sharpened their attack and sought Governor S.C. Jamir’s intervention in the matter, Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik has assured that such tragic incidents would not recur in future. That responsibility has been entrusted with Development Commissioner R. Balakrishnan, who first visited the Nagada hills as Sub-Collector of the then Jajpur subdivision way back in November 1986. As a young officer then, Balakrishnan had walked up the hills and distributed clothes to the Juang tribals. The situation has not changed even today. “The crux of the matter is connectivity. The topography poses a big challenge. But efforts are being made on a war footing to overcome the difficulties and ensure service delivery,” he says.

“No politician or anyone from the government has visited our village in recent years,” says Binod Pradhan, 50, one of the Nagada elders. Pradhan requests for Bidhaba Bhatta (widow pension); his wife had died five years ago after she developed high fever. Little does he know that the scheme is meant for women. For that matter, most on the hills know very little of the bouquet of welfare programmes they are entitled to. Perhaps they will, the day the ascent to and descent from Nagada hills isn’t a precarious matter of watching your step. (Source: The Hindu dated August 6, 2016)

The Rip Van Winkle villages are waking up

One year after the malnutrition deaths scandal, the remote hamlets of Nagada are taking tentative steps to meet the 21st century

The temperature was soaring that day when we reached the top of the forested Nagada hills. We were in an SUV. When we reached, we found an ice-cream vendor on a motorcycle going around the hamlets. Children crowded around him excitedly. But when they bought the ice-cream, they were not quite sure how to eat it. So they put it into small bowls, waited till it melted down, then they drank it up.

“This is the first time an ice-cream vendor has come to our village,” said Rabi Pradhan.

Perched on top of a thickly-wooded hill, the five tribal hamlets have been inaccessible for decades. The only way to reach them was a seven-kilometre arduous trek through thick forests and rocky terrain.

The road out

Now, the first-ever road to Nagada is being laid. In a few weeks, the serpentine access will be complete and we see road graders at work. Happiness is writ large on the faces of Rabi Pradhan and Alimai Pradhan of the Tala Nagada hamlet.

To be connected by road to the outside world is not something they had imagined would happen in their lifetime. The few hundred Juang tribal families who live here have walked up and down these hills since the beginning of time, living much the same lives their ancestors did a century ago.

In these many decades, chromite worth millions has been extracted from the nearby hills of the Sukinda block of Odisha’s Jajpur district, but these hamlets have been out of the government’s purview. Until, that is, June of last year, when 19 children died of various diseases. Upon further investigation, it was found that the chief culprit was malnourishment.

When the administration woke up to the news, the deaths had already been happening for over a month. The Women and Child Development department conducted a survey and found children with severe to acute malnutrition, with wasted, stunted bodies, vulnerable to disease and death.

Hidden from view

Until last July, the five hamlets of Nagada—Tala Nagada, Majhi Nagada, Upara Nagada, Tumuni and Guhiasala—had no road connectivity, no electricity, and no source of potable water.

The nearest hospital was a private one at Kaliapani, 27 km away. There was no primary school, only an informal one that had been started by a voluntary organisation in November 2015. The lone anganwadi worker assigned for the Nagada hamlets lived in the foothills.

When news of the deaths broke and the government woke up, doctors and nurses had to make several strenuous treks up the hills to set up tents just to provide basic medicines and nutrition.

Today, the Juang tribes find vehicles ferrying doctors and government officials reaching their homes at regular intervals. Welfare schemes they had not even heard of now arrive at their doorsteps.

The hamlets now have three mini Anganwadi centres, and the Mamata scheme has been implemented, a conditional cash transfer programme under which pregnant and lactating women are given financial assistance of Rs. 5,000 for the first two live births.

A health sub-centre has been set up with one auxiliary nurse midwife; and one multi-purpose health worker is to be deputed. Integrated Child Development Services teams visit regularly to keep an eye out for malnutrition; anti-malaria measures have been initiated.

All houses now have solar lights, as do streets, and they were all working when we visited. Meanwhile, sub-stations are being erected for electrification. The Biju Pucca Ghar Yojana has been invoked to start constructing pucca houses. The informal school is now run by the government with the help of the NGO, while another primary school is being built at Guhiasala, expected to start functioning after the road is built. Two 100-bed hostels for Scheduled Tribe students have been sanctioned at the foothills and work will begin soon.

Some things remain

The major problem that continues, at least in Tala Nagada, is that of drinking water, and women and girls are still fetching water from forest streams. Wells have been dug in three other hamlets, but the one here has been a failure. There is some ongoing work to divert water from hill streams using pipes.

Despite these basic facilities reaching the Juangs, strangely enough, their food habits have not changed. They still subsist on boiled rice and salt. They also eat boiled wild tuber that they collect from the forest.

Although several families have cows, they don’t drink the milk. They believe that a cow’s milk is meant for her calves. At the Kaliapani hospital, we found one malnourished child from Nagada undergoing treatment. “Most of the malnutrition is primarily because of the mothers being in poor health,” said a doctor who is part of a medical team that visits Nagada twice every month.

Child marriage is another factor: most couples have more than three children and not enough to feed them. Andhari Pradhan is a mother of three. Her four-month-old daughter was recently in the district hospital in Jajpur town, 110 km away, for 25 days.

And when we spoke to her, she seemed unaware of the basic concepts of family planning or child nutrition.

The Odisha government now wants to extend the Nagada experiment to other tribal hamlets across Odisha. Though the specifics might vary, the government plans to first start connecting the inaccessible pockets to the interior regions of the State.

State Development Commissioner R. Balakrishnan is in charge of the project. In 1986, when he was the sub-collector of the then Jajpur subdivision, getting to Nagada and back took him nine-and-a-half hours. Now, it will take around 30 minutes. He plans to visit the Juang families oftener and see the plans take off.

The Juangs, classified as a “particularly vulnerable” tribe, believe their ancestors sprung from the earth of the hills where the River Baitarani springs from. They don’t believe in god and only worship nature. Soon, these primeval people will be fully integrated into the larger world around them, fast-tracked into modernity. There is a happy innocence with which the Juangs look forward to this. (Source: The Hindu. Dated May 6, 2017)