Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Hindu
The Hindu
National
Vivek Narayanan

Tiruvallur police rope in Hindi-speaking volunteers to help communicate with migrant workers

Police officials who speak Hindi have been roped in to communicate with migrant workers (Source: The Hindu)

In a bid to enhance communications with migrant workers walking into Tiruvallur district and help them reach shelters, the Tiruvallur police and administration have roped in Hindi-speaking volunteers and policemen.

With over 6,000 migrant workers housed in 21 shelters in Tiruvallur and many more being brought here from various districts, one of the major challenges faced by the administration and the police was the inability to communicate in Hindi.

“This was posing as a problem as it was important for the guest workers to trust us and this can be done only by conversing in their language. Hence, we identified policemen who could speak Hindi as well as some local volunteers,” said P. Aravindan, SP, Tiruvallur.

While the civilian volunteers are Nandan from Jharkhand, Kalicharan from Odisha and Nilesh from West Bengal, the two from the police are R. Soundararajan and D. Parthiban from Sholvaram police station.

“We have a check post at Padianallur and the workers who walk towards Tiruvallur are stopped here. The volunteer, from the respective state, will speak to them and convince them to go to the shelters and stay there till a train is arranged by the government,” said Pawan Kumar Reddy, ASP, Ponneri.

The two policemen will go in patrol vehicles along the GNT Road and if they spot anyone walking or cycling, they will speak to them in Hindi and take them to shelters. “We were deployed in Tihar Jail for few years and picked up Hindi,” said Mr. Parthiban. The policmen speak Telugu as well.

R. Soundararajan said that the main concern of the migrant workers is about the trains. “All of them want to be with their families. But they want to return to Chennai after a few months,” he explained.

The police have also set up a watch tower on the Chennai Outer Ring Road to monitor the movement of workers. “Some people take a circuitous route to reach Gummidipoondi when they spot us at the checkpost. Hence the policeman at the watchtower checks for migrant workers too,” added the ASP.

The Tiruvallur district administration has also roped in officials who know Hindi to communicate with migrant workers at the shelters.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.