THE LIGHT OF ANDAMANS | VOL 36 | ISSUE 04 | 15 NOV 2012
CHALTE | CHALTE:
Innocent or Unaware
He had worked for more than
7 years in tribal areas in parts of India . During his tenure with such
activities he was on a visit to a tribal village accompanied by a doctor to
have a health survey, when he came across a girl suffering from TB. Neither her
parents nor the villagers would know her ailment and a government doctor of
that area was treating her as a private practitioner. Following the government
scheme the girl was being administered the DOTS course with vitamin capsules
and tonics, but the family had to pay for everything to the doctor. The parents
and villagers were happy as the patient was recovering fast following the
medicine for which they had to cough off a hefty amount of about 70-75 thousand
rupees in favour of the government but private practicing doctor. The parents
had to be parted away with an acre of their fertile land to meet the
expenditure. They were innocent or unaware!
In another case, 17 tribal
families were identified as beneficiaries in a drought prone area to be
assisted to purchase pair of bullock. The office of the Project Officer had
sanctioned an amount of Rupees 23000/- to each beneficiaries against some
documents to receive the cheques. An official in the same office lent a hand to
those innocent but unaware tribal beneficiaries with the promise to help them to
get them the cheques. He managed their signatures and received the cheques,
xeroxed them and gave the xeroxed cheques to the beneficiaries with an advice
to approach the bank after a fortnight. The plea was the bank did not have
enough money to pay them. Meanwhile, in connivance with bank official he
managed to withdraw money. After the fortnight when the beneficiaries
approached the Bank and produced the xeroxed cheques, the same Bank official
simply sent them back saying that the cheques were duplicate and the government
played a gag with them. The tribal beneficiaries believed it as if nothing new
had happened. They tore the xeroxed cheques and took their way back to village
cursing the government as they lost a day's labour and bus fare.
— Musafir
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