Anganwadi workers they are not getting funds to buy rations and their wages are getting delayed since the Modi government halved the budget for the Integrated Child Development Scheme.
Anumeha Yadav 
‘Children are worst affected’: Budget cuts are taking a toll on a crucial nutrition scheme

Photo Credit: Right to Food Campaign
21.5K
Total Views
The fears are coming true. Earlier this year, activists had warned the Modi government that its decision to slash funds for India’s oldest supplementary nutrition scheme for vulnerable women and children would prove a disaster. But the government paid little heed. Now the ripples are being felt on the ground.

Children aren’t getting their hot meals regularly, nor are grassroots workers receiving their wages on time. To compensate for this, villages in at least one part of Punjab are being asked to provide grains and sugar so that vulnerable children can get the nutrition they require.

Funds and rations delayed

The Integrated Child Development Scheme is the largest universal programme for children, serving 8 crore children below the age of six years. It provides take-home dry rations at village-level anganwadis (crèches) to children younger than 3 years and to pregnant and lactating women. Children in the age group of 3-6 years get hot meals under the scheme, which additionally focuses on immunisation, health check-ups, growth monitoring, pre-school education and health education programmes for adolescents.

In February, the National Democratic Alliance government halved the funds for the crucial scheme in the union budget, from Rs 18,681 crore to Rs 8,335 crore for 2015-’16.

A few months on, anganwadi workers from Uttar Pradesh, Punjab and Haryana say there have been delays in the supply of funds to buy dry rations and consequent disruptions in hot meals for children.

“We get Rs 3,100 per month to prepare one hot cooked meal a day for every 40 children aged between 3-6 years,” said Rajeshwari Devi, an anganwadi worker from Bulandshahar in Uttar Pradesh. “Since July, funds are not reaching us regularly. We did not get money some months, then got it for several months in one go. Several other anganwadi centres haven’t got funds for the last couple of months.”

Geeta Sharma, who has worked as an anganwadi sewika in Arniya in Uttar Pradesh since 1995, said there were instances in the past too when anganwadi workers’ wages were not paid on time, but never was it this bad. “Also, this is the first time even our block supervisors have not been paid since two months,” she said. “When we go to them and enquire, they throw up their hands and ask what can they do.”

Rajeshwari Devi and Geeta Sharma were among more than 500 anganwadi workers from 10 states who came to Delhi in early November to attend a meeting of the All India Federation of Anganwadi Workers and Helpers and protest against the shrinking of social policies.

At the meeting, anganwadi workers from Punjab said they had been constrained to ask village communities to donate grains and sugar so they could continue providing nutritional supplements and snacks to children at government anganwadis.

“Since last few months, we are not getting rations regularly,” said Gurcharan Kaur, an anganwadi worker in Moga in Punjab. “Some months there is no sugar, and at other times cooking oil is missing. Twice this year, I have had to ask people in my village to donate sugar so we can keep the anganwadi running.”

Veena Dhimwal, from Yamunanagar in Haryana, said the fund cuts were undermining the role of anganwadi workers in the poorest areas. “The rich and middle class households don’t listen to us,” said Dhimwal. “But in villages with backward castes and Dalits, a lot of families send their children to anganwadis for meals. After fund cuts, anganwadis in the poorest districts will not get any new infrastructure or improvements.”

The General Secretary of the All India Federation of Anganwadi Workers and Helpers, AR Sindhu, said the unions under the umbrella organisation are planning a protest march to the Parliament. “Anganwadi employees are not being paid wages in Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra since the last four-five months,” said Sindhu. “The Ministry of Women and Child Development has failed to address these concerns.”

Basic responsibilities

 

Anganwadi workers they are not getting funds to buy rations and their wages are getting delayed since the Modi government halved the budget for the Integrated Child Development Scheme.
Anumeha Yadav 
‘Children are worst affected’: Budget cuts are taking a toll on a crucial nutrition scheme

Photo Credit: Right to Food Campaign
21.5K
Total Views
The fears are coming true. Earlier this year, activists had warned the Modi government that its decision to slash funds for India’s oldest supplementary nutrition scheme for vulnerable women and children would prove a disaster. But the government paid little heed. Now the ripples are being felt on the ground.

Children aren’t getting their hot meals regularly, nor are grassroots workers receiving their wages on time. To compensate for this, villages in at least one part of Punjab are being asked to provide grains and sugar so that vulnerable children can get the nutrition they require.

Funds and rations delayed

The Integrated Child Development Scheme is the largest universal programme for children, serving 8 crore children below the age of six years. It provides take-home dry rations at village-level anganwadis (crèches) to children younger than 3 years and to pregnant and lactating women. Children in the age group of 3-6 years get hot meals under the scheme, which additionally focuses on immunisation, health check-ups, growth monitoring, pre-school education and health education programmes for adolescents.

In February, the National Democratic Alliance government halved the funds for the crucial scheme in the union budget, from Rs 18,681 crore to Rs 8,335 crore for 2015-’16.

A few months on, anganwadi workers from Uttar Pradesh, Punjab and Haryana say there have been delays in the supply of funds to buy dry rations and consequent disruptions in hot meals for children.

“We get Rs 3,100 per month to prepare one hot cooked meal a day for every 40 children aged between 3-6 years,” said Rajeshwari Devi, an anganwadi worker from Bulandshahar in Uttar Pradesh. “Since July, funds are not reaching us regularly. We did not get money some months, then got it for several months in one go. Several other anganwadi centres haven’t got funds for the last couple of months.”

Geeta Sharma, who has worked as an anganwadi sewika in Arniya in Uttar Pradesh since 1995, said there were instances in the past too when anganwadi workers’ wages were not paid on time, but never was it this bad. “Also, this is the first time even our block supervisors have not been paid since two months,” she said. “When we go to them and enquire, they throw up their hands and ask what can they do.”

Rajeshwari Devi and Geeta Sharma were among more than 500 anganwadi workers from 10 states who came to Delhi in early November to attend a meeting of the All India Federation of Anganwadi Workers and Helpers and protest against the shrinking of social policies.

At the meeting, anganwadi workers from Punjab said they had been constrained to ask village communities to donate grains and sugar so they could continue providing nutritional supplements and snacks to children at government anganwadis.

“Since last few months, we are not getting rations regularly,” said Gurcharan Kaur, an anganwadi worker in Moga in Punjab. “Some months there is no sugar, and at other times cooking oil is missing. Twice this year, I have had to ask people in my village to donate sugar so we can keep the anganwadi running.”

Veena Dhimwal, from Yamunanagar in Haryana, said the fund cuts were undermining the role of anganwadi workers in the poorest areas. “The rich and middle class households don’t listen to us,” said Dhimwal. “But in villages with backward castes and Dalits, a lot of families send their children to anganwadis for meals. After fund cuts, anganwadis in the poorest districts will not get any new infrastructure or improvements.”

The General Secretary of the All India Federation of Anganwadi Workers and Helpers, AR Sindhu, said the unions under the umbrella organisation are planning a protest march to the Parliament. “Anganwadi employees are not being paid wages in Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra since the last four-five months,” said Sindhu. “The Ministry of Women and Child Development has failed to address these concerns.”

Basic responsibilities

Read more here – http://scroll.in/article/767475/children-are-worst-affected-budget-cuts-are-taking-a-toll-on-a-crucial-nutrition-scheme