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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Amrit Dhillon In Kochi

‘The metro smashed the old rules’: Indian women drive change – and trains

Passengers waits to board a Kochi Metro train at Aluva station in Kochi, Kerala
Passengers waits to board a Kochi Metro train at Aluva station. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian

Down on the platform, where the air is intensely muggy in the March heat, a train glides in. The driver is a woman.

The ticket office is run by a woman. A transgender woman helps customers at the inquiry desk. On four of the metro’s stations, passengers can go into a special cubicle to breastfeed their babies.

At the station, Rejitha, dressed in a turquoise and pink uniform, is on hand to help the hundreds of people who use the Kochi Metro every day. “See, you place it flat like this on the sensor to get through,” she tells a customer struggling to get through the ticket barrier.

Kochi Metro train driver Hima C poses at Muttom station in Kochi, Kerala
Kochi Metro train driver Hima C poses at Muttom station in Kochi, Kerala. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
A metro worker helps a traveller with the automatic fare collection machine at Aluva metro station in Kochi
A metro worker helps a traveller with the automatic fare collection machine at Aluva metro station in Kochi. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
Metro workers at the customer care centre at Aluva metro station in Kochi
Metro workers at the customer care centre at Aluva metro station in Kochi. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
A woman at a customer care centre at Muttom metro station in Kochi
A woman at a customer care centre at Muttom metro station in Kochi. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
  • Clockwise from left: Kochi Metro train driver Hima C; a metro worker helps a passenger through the ticket barrier at Aluva station; the customer care centre at Aluva station; a customer care worker at Muttom station

An army of women make up about 80% of the 1,300-strong metro workforce.

From cleaning posts to senior management roles – aside from the managing director, who is a man – this is an operation conceived to give women more job opportunities.

“It’s a safe and clean environment for me. The money I get makes a big difference to our budget and to what I can do for my family,” says Rejitha, who goes by a single name.

Passengers walk past a breastfeeding pod at Aluva metro station in Kochi
Passengers walk past a breastfeeding pod at Aluva metro station in Kochi. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
  • Passengers walk past a breastfeeding pod at Aluva metro station in Kochi

The predominance of women explains the decision to install the breastfeeding pods, equipped with a seat, fan, and phone charging point. The pods are located in parts of stations that can be accessed without a ticket so that any passing woman who needs it can walk in off the street and use it.

“We realised that breastfeeding rates were coming down in Kerala and wondered if we could help. If demand goes up, we will install more of them,” says Sumi Nadarajan, senior deputy general manager for planning and sustainability.

Plants are seen on the pillars of Palarivattom metro station in Kochi, Kerala
Plants are seen on the pillars of Palarivattom metro station in Kochi, Kerala. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
  • Plants are seen on the pillars of Palarivattom metro station

This sensitivity typifies many of the state-owned metro’s policies. It was an unusual infrastructure project from the outset. In a country where projects routinely run over budget and break deadlines, the metro was completed within the agreed cost and time constraints. It uses solar power for 35% of its energy needs, and more than 200 of the pillars dotted around the station have been turned into vertical gardens with the use of compost made from municipal waste.

A Kochi Metro train travels along an elevated track in the southern Indian state of Kerala
A Kochi Metro train travels along an elevated track in the southern Indian state of Kerala. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian

One key decision was to train and appoint female drivers: seven out of the 39 drivers are women. Another was hiring 60 transgender women, the first time any company in India has formally decided to hire along such lines. As former metro managing director Elias George said at the time, “society’s mindset will change only by direct interaction with” transgender people.

In a move to give further jobs to women, the metro joined up with a women’s collective called Kudumbashree to supply meals. Women cook lunches in their homes and, travelling on the metro, deliver the meals in steel “tiffin” boxes (to avoid plastic) to metro employees at various stations. They earn money and metro employees enjoy home-cooked food.

Members of the Kudumbhashree collective pack lunches for Kochi Metro staff
Members of the Kudumbhashree collective pack lunches for Kochi Metro staff. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
Lunches for Kochi Metro staff
Lunches for Kochi Metro staff. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
A member of Kudumbhashree holds a lunch box as she travels on a Koshi Metro train
A member of Kudumbhashree holds a lunch box as she travels on a Koshi Metro train. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
A Kudumbhashree member hands a Koshi Metro worker her lunch
A Kudumbhashree member hands a Koshi Metro worker her lunch. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
  • Members of the Kudumbhashree women’s collective make and distribute lunches for Koshi Metro staff

“From day one, we believed the policies that shape this institution must be progressive and innovative and aimed at social inclusion and women’s empowerment,” says Kochi Metro managing director Mohammed Hanish.

Bringing Kerala’s transgender people into the public eye has not been easy. Unlike in other parts of India, transgender people here live hidden away. “In north India, transgenders live in communities called hamams but in Kerala they are solitary and isolated,” says Sumi Mohan, board member of human rights organisation Sahayatrika.

The attrition rate among transgender employees has been high. Finding affordable accommodation near the station where they work was a problem for many. “It was a challenge keeping them employed. Many took lots of medical leave. They need surgery or they have issues with their hormone treatment. And they wanted a daily wage. They live from hand to mouth and can’t wait for a month before being paid. But we couldn’t change the rules for just one section of employees,” says Natarajan.

Transgender Kothi Metro employee Karthika, 33, poses at Changampuzha Park metro station
Transgender Kothi Metro employee Karthika, 33, poses at Changampuzha Park metro station. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
  • Kothi Metro employee Karthika poses at Changampuzha Park station

As a result, only a dozen remain. One of them is Karthika Raghavan, 36, who gave up her job as a biochemist in a laboratory, because it was too solitary, to work as a customer assistant on the metro. Raghavan’s parents accepted her and she continues to live with them, something of a rarity among transgender people in Kerala.

“My job in the lab was with non-living things. Being out and meeting all kinds of people on the metro makes me feel happy,” she says in fluent English. “Whenever I used to look for jobs, the ad specified male or female. The Kochi Metro has smashed all the old rules by giving us work.”

Karthika sits at a ticket counter at Changampuzha Park station in Kochi
Karthika sits at a ticket counter at Changampuzha Park station in Kochi. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian

The metro’s policies stem from a wider progressive ethos that is perhaps unique to Kerala. Although the state has been in the news recently for the campaign by women to win the right to pray at the Sabarimala temple, where women have been denied entry for decades, this is something of an aberration. The state has a high female literacy rate, low maternal and infant mortality, and a healthy sex ratio compared with other Indian states.

Passengers are seen inside a Kochi Metro train at Edapally metro station in Kochi
Passengers are seen inside a Kochi Metro train at Edapally metro station in Kochi. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian

Nevertheless, few women, despite being educated, feature in the labour force. According to the latest official data for 2011-12, 22% of women work in the formal sector in rural areas, compared with 56% of men, lower than the 25% figure for India as a whole.

Passengers disembark at Edapally metro station in Kochi
Passengers disembark at Edapally metro station in Kochi. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
A member of Muttom station’s housekeeping department at work
A member of Muttom station’s housekeeping department at work. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
Muttom metro station in Kochi, Kerala
Muttom metro station in Kochi, Kerala. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
Passengers on board a Kothi Metro train
Passengers on board a Kothi Metro train. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian

This is why the Kochi Metro made a conscious effort to give jobs to women. There has been no shortage of takers. Women even work the night shift, which is notable in a society where you rarely see women out after sunset in rural areas.

Kothi Metro driver Hima C
Kothi Metro driver Hima C. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian

Hima C, as she is known, is a 27-year-old driver – an assistant “loco-pilot”, as it is called. The shifts don’t bother her because she loves her job. “The metro is elevated, so it soars over the city. I love that sense of space – and the way people on the platform, when they see the train rolling in, smile and wave at me,” she says.

Raghavan also has no problem with shift work. “I want to be trained as a driver. That’s the next logical step and that’s my new ambition,” she says.

A Kochi Metro train travels along an elevated track in the Aluva-Pulinchodu area of Kochi
A Kochi Metro train travels along an elevated track in the Aluva-Pulinchodu area of Kochi. Photograph: Sivaram V/The Guardian
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