

Rights of the Disabled
Thirty-nine-year-old Sumit Anand, a Âdoctor with the North Delhi Municipal Corporation, is running from pillar to post for the past six months to get his salary and other entitlements guaranteed under the Rights of Persons with Disability (PwD) Act 2016. Despite the government guidelines exeÂmpting persons with disabilities from Covid duties, he rendered his service as in-charge of a Covid testing centre in Karol Bagh until Ârecently. For this, he got appreciation letters from the Delhi administration. Yet, he can바카라t pay the rent of his Rohini flat and foot the medical bills of his elderly parents (his father has Parkinson바카라s disease and other ailments).
바카라I have no money even for my physiotherapy sessions, which are necessary to keep me going. That leaves me no option but to beg and borrow,바카라 says Anand. 바카라As the sole breadearner of my family, I don바카라t know how long I can survive like this. For the first few months, department officials kept on dilly-dallying on releasing my salary, saying it was under process. After I submitted more than 20 written reminders, they came up with faulty bills and began pressurising me to sign them. As I Ârefused, they held back my salary.바카라
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In 2018, when Anand joined the municipal corporation as a doctor, he was posted at the Urban Health Centre in Karol Bagh. He Âbecame disabled later that year after an accidental surgical injury. With his back paralysed, he has limited movement in his right hand and shoulder. 바카라My life has turned upside down. The PwD Act stipulates that people like me should get a comfortable work environment. Nobody should humiliate us for our Âdisadvantages. But some colleagues and seniors have made insensitive remarks.바카라
바카라Prakash Kumar


Right to Work
Right to work is the right of everyone to the opportunity of making a living by work freely chosen or accepted. The Constitution of India doesn바카라t mention it as a separate right, but it does guarantee a right to life (Article 21), and courts have been Âinterpreting this fundamental right to include the right to work. According to development economist and social scientist Ritika Khera, however, the right to work is not a fundamental right, but one of the directive principles of state policy, which are non-justiciable.
In 2005, the UPA government enacted a law바카라the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA)바카라to address the right to work, but it was limited in scope in terms of the nature of jobs, wages and number of beneficiaries per household. Khera says it is a 바카라statutory바카라, not constitutional, right. Under MGNREGA, empÂloyment for 100 days is assured for one person from every rural household within 15 days of being Âenrolled, or else the government has to Âprovide unemployment wages. The government fixes the unemployment wage as well as wages for different jobs in MGNREGA Âprojects. One of the largest scheÂmes of its kind, experts point out that it has been lacking on many fronts, Âincluding proper implementation and timely payment of wages.
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While many countries recognise the right to work, their nature varies. In the US, for Âexample, it implies the right of Âpeople to Ârefuse to join a union or go on strike. Many countries also have social Âsecurity schemes for unemployed and Âvulnerable people, but the rules are not Âuniformly applied. The focus is more on Âemployees바카라 rights at work.
바카라Lola Nayar


Right to Marry
Does love make people adventurous? How else could 22-year old Amreen Malik scale the wall of her parents바카라 house at midnight to live with Mohit Nagar, now her life partner? When neighbours Mohit and Amreen had decided to tie the knot, they never imagined religion would play spoilsport. Inter-faith marriages were not commonplace in Kharauli, their small village in Meerut. Though their families knew each other for long, a Hindu-Muslim marriage was out of the question for them. Amreen바카라s family took her phone away and locked her up. When Mohit tried to explore legal options, his lawyers Âadvised him to get Amreen to convert to Hinduism. 바카라Nobody suggested the option of the Special Marriage Act,바카라 says Mohit.
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The couple eloped to Delhi in March after Amreen came to know her parents had fixed her marriage. In Delhi, though they had help from Dhanak, an NGO, Covid restrictions and red tape compounded their troubles. It was only after the Delhi High Court바카라s intervention in June that the special district magistrate gave them a date for marriage. They married in July.


바카라Religious faith shouldn바카라t come in the way of love. Our children will choose their life Âpartners. Religion or caste shouldn바카라t be an Âobstacle,바카라 says Amreen.
바카라Preetha Nair


Right to Education
Shivani Kumari, a class-7 student, has not studied at all since her school was closed in March during the Covid lockdown. Unlike some of her better-off school mates in the village, she does not have a mobile phone, a TV or a radio to Âattend her classes. 바카라My father purchased books for me and asked me to study on my own in the morning. Sometimes I do it, but, once my parents leave for work in the fields, I go and play with other children,바카라 says the student of the government middle school at Dwasay village in Dandkhora block of Bihar바카라s Katihar district.
Shivani바카라s brother Sawan Kumar, a class-9 student, also spends his time hanging out with friends in the village. Shivani바카라s father Shrawan Tanti says at least 70 per cent of the children in his village of about 1,700 households do not have access to these classes. 바카라The school administration has made no alternative arrangement for such students. We are landless daily-wage Âlabourers working on others바카라 farms for a Âpittance. From where do we buy a mobile phone, a TV or a radio?바카라 he asks.
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As mid-day meals cannot be served in schools so long as they remain shut, the central government has asked all states to provide a food security allowance to Âchildren, comprising food grains, pulses, oil, vegetables and other items along with cooking cost of Rs 4.97 (primary school) and Rs 7.45 (upper primary school). 바카라We have not got anything from the school so far,바카라 says Shivani바카라s mother Poonam Devi.
바카라Prakash Kumar


Rights of Adivasis
Rahul Oraon is in despair these days. If the government has its way, the 40-year old바카라s ancestral home in Jharkhand바카라s Kute village will soon make way for new state assembly and secretariat buildings. A Ânotification has been published in local Ânewspapers and a land survey is underway. The contentious issue of land acquisition in Kute and neighbouring villages is once again in the spotlight.
바카라We had no inkling about it. This land ÂbeloÂngs to our ancestors and generations have lived here. Yet, the administration is Âsurveying the area without our permission and threatening villagers who oppose it,바카라 says Rahul, who fears the government will take away his home without following any procedures. 바카라They have flouted rules and Âregulations in the past too. We will fight to the end to keep our 10 acres of land.바카라 That바카라s the sole source of Âlivelihood for his extended Âfamily of 100.
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Trouble started in the 1960s when the Âgovernment acquired thousands of acres of land for the public sector Heavy Engineering Corporation (HEC), he recalls. A lion바카라s share of the acquired land was left unused and Âvillagers have been asking the government to return it. 바카라We were taken for a ride. Thousands of displaced families still have neither got Âadequate compensation nor been properly Ârehabilitated,바카라 he says. A few kilometres away from his home, the government has set up a new housing colony to rehabilitate at least 400 displaced villagers. 바카라Those houses are too small. We will not leave our land unless we get sufficient compensation or rehabilitation. Under the land acquisition law of 2013, the government cannot acquire adivasi land by force,바카라 he says.Â
바카라Preetha Nair


Locked Up Identity, collage on paper, 2020.
Right to Be Forgotten
In 2016, a petitioner moved the Delhi High Court seeking to remove a reference to a criminal case that kept cropping up whenever he typed his name in a Google search bar. This was because a Ârecord was freely available through an Indian legal research portal바카라s search engine and his plea was that it could harm his reputation or worse, Âcareer바카라a somewhat similar scenario to the 2014 European Court of Justice ruling, which set a global precedent on the right to be forgotten online.
The Delhi High Court is currently hearing this petition. The story goes back to a dispute among the petitioner바카라s family members, which led to many criminal complaints. One such complaint against the petitioner바카라s wife (where his name is mentioned as the direct relation) had gone before a magistrate, who directed the police to take necessary action. Eventually, the disputing family members withdrew their cases. But this court directive, which is not a judgment, but an order on an Âallegation, still shows up on the legal research portal and Âconsequently on Google, says the petitioner바카라s advocate, Anshumaan Sahni. 바카라Unlike court websites that require specific case details in order to search for a court order, this document is freely available online to Âanyone who looks up the petitioner바카라s name,바카라 Sahni adds.
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The right to be forgotten, as a piece of legislation, is still a work in progress in India바카라it has been included as a section in the Personal Data Protection Bill introduced in the Lok Sabha in 2019. 바카라This right is also germane to the Supreme Court바카라s privacy judgment of 2017, which effectively gives individuals power to take control of their Âinformational privacy,바카라 says Sahni.
바카라Ajay Sukumaran


Rights of Sex Workers
Ayeesha Rai has been out of work since the Âpandemic hit the country. As a sex worker, she is struggling for survival with mounting debts and zero income. Government schemes such as free rations are out of bounds as she is not recognised as a worker. 바카라The pandemic has exposed our vulnerability even more,바카라 says Ayeesha.
Fifteen years ago, after trying a few low-wage work Âoptions, she opted for sex work as it provided her a stable income to take care of her four-member family. 바카라Sex work should be treated like any other service. We want dignity of labour,바카라 says Ayeesha, who moved from her native West Bengal to Delhi a few years ago, as she didn바카라t want her family to face harassment and stigma due to her work.
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Having seen the exploitation and harassment meted out to sex workers by police and others, she is now at the forefront of sex workers바카라 struggles against discrimination and violence, and is associated with advocacy groups and rights organisations. 바카라Society must stop seeing sex workers solely as victims or in need of rehabilitation,바카라 she says. 바카라Abolition or legalisation of sex work are not Âdesirable options. Only decriminalisation will go a long way in ensuring safe working conditions.바카라
바카라Preetha Nair


Right to Same-Sex Marriage
The Supreme Court바카라s landmark verdict of September 6, 2018, reading down Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) to decriminalise consensual homosexual relations was a personal victory for 36-year-old Nikesh Pushkaran. But, while the verdict has given them the freedom to be in love, Nikesh and his 32-year-old partner, Sonu MS, continue to struggle for the same fundamental and human rights enjoyed by heterosexual couples. Last January, they became the first same-sex couple to move a petition seeking changes to the Special Marriage Act so their marriage, solemnised in July 2018바카라two months before the Section 377 or Navtej Johar verdict바카라could get legal sanctity. The petition, filed in the Kerala High Court by their lawyer, Manu Srinath, triggered similar pleas in the Delhi High Court. But, with the courts only hearing urgent matters for a better part of the year due to the Covid lockdown, there has been no forward movement on these petitions.
The central and state governments, which had been Âissued notices to file their response to the pleas, are yet to do so. 바카라We have been married for over two years, but when we have to fill out any government or official form, we still have to identify ourselves as 바카라single바카라,바카라 Nikesh says.
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바카라If Sonu needs treatment at a hospital, I can바카라t sign consent forms for him; if we want to open a bank account or buy an insurance policy, we can바카라t do it as a couple. In the absence of basic rights such as the right to marry, adopt a child, open a joint bank account and inherit property, the Section 377 verdict will simply lose its meaning. It바카라s like the system telling us we are free to have sex, but can바카라t expect parity in rights with other couples. The reluctance to extend us the same rights that heterosexual people enjoy legitimises our continued othering in society that the Section 377 verdict was supposed to end.바카라
바카라Puneet Nicholas Yadav


Rights to the Forest
Seventy-year-old Mohammed Sidiq Chopan is clueless about his and his children바카라s future. A month ago, the government of the Union territory of Jammu and Kashmir sent him a notice, asking him to vacate their land in Negu, a village on a forested hilltop in central Kashmir바카라s Budgam district. According to the notice, their household is among more than 100 in the village that are 바카라unauthorised occupants of forest land바카라, and that they all have to vacÂate their lands within 10 days of receiving the notice. 바카라We and our forefathers have been living in the village for more than 150 years. Suddenly we are being told to vacate our lands and cut down our walnut and apple trees. As our homes are also on these lands, they are actually asking us to leave our homes. We are poor people. We don바카라t know where to go and what to do,바카라 he says.
The Chopans are known as the shephÂerds of Kashmir, their traditional occupation, though many of them also have to work as daily-wage labourers to make ends meet. The government claims to retrieve forest land 바카라under the unauthorised occupation of people바카라, but experts say the drive is in Âviolation of the Forest Rights Act 2006.
바카라Naseer Ganai
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