Haryana: unemployment due to locking, Rohingya refugees waited for Jab to Noah – News2IN
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Haryana: unemployment due to locking, Rohingya refugees waited for Jab to Noah

Haryana: unemployment due to locking, Rohingya refugees waited for Jab to Noah
Written by news2in

Gurugram: Ansarul Haq raised his head every nap disturbed by the bustle of children playing on a sandbow.
A few meters away, a group of men involved in random discussions for a long time.
Women are in homes, engage in housework.
The time seems to stop at this camp for Rohingya refugees at Chandeni Noah.
The next key has robbed the man here work.
And because most of them have not been vaccinated, finding work is increasingly difficult now.
Chandeni is between five camps for Rohingya refugees in Noah where the majority of the people have not been pasted once.
More than 1,000 families live here.
In the absence of work and with fatigue savings, these people find it difficult to meet needs.
With children playing nearby, Ansarul could not finish his sleep.
He woke up with an irritated face.
The 27-year-old fat man told Tii, he would transport vegetables from taking a bath to the main market until the Kuncian hit last year.
“I will get around Rs 5,000 a month.
But now, it’s hard to arrange food every day.
I don’t know how long we can continue like this,” said Ansarul, who now takes a cloth and sells it for a dealer memo for a small amount.
Nearly 1,000 refugees live in Chandeni camp, 46 km from the city on Jalan Gurgaon-Alwar.
Work and income are not their problems.
Unlike other rural areas in the district, drive vaccines have avoided these sites, they accused.
A few months ago, said Ansarul, a group of health officials had visited the camp.
But because most men go looking for work, only 30 refugees can be vaccinated.
Since then there is no health department team.
“They can at least announce it the day before.
We will remain back in the village.
But instead, they came when we all left,” said Ansarul, who his wife and four children managed to take Jab.
According to a rough estimate, around 70% of Rohingya refugees live in five camps have not been vaccinated.
About 20 km in Nangli Village, even one person has received a shot.
Here too, the Ministry of Health team comes with a vaccine dose.
But only a few women and children are present at the camp.
For them, get vaccinations is one of the prerequisites for finding work.
Before the pandemic, most of these refugees will work as a daily wage worker at the construction site.
Now, they do part time work such as water jars carrying or working in small hotels.
Lack of sustenance has had cascading effects on those who run a business near the camp.
Sultan Amin (42), which has a small groceries that sell food in Ningla, has not received Rs 15,000 from its customers who find it difficult to pay it out because of the lack of existing work.
“My monthly income is spent buying food from wholesale.
At this level, I have to close the store immediately,” Amin said.
According to Deputy Commissioner Noah Shakti Singh, there were doubts among the refugees to take vaccines.
“We have known that many of the refugees hesitate to take vaccines.
We run several campaigns in previous camps, but there is no special drive now.
If they want to be vaccinated, they must visit the nearest government center,” he said.

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