The pathetic condition of kin of ‘woodcutters’

Seshachalam encounter Relief money spent on funeral, women looking for jobs

May 23, 2015 12:00 am | Updated 05:58 am IST - Tiruvannamalai:

It is about one and a half months since twenty people from Tamil Nadu, including 12 from Tiruvannamalai district, were killed in Seshachalam forests by the Red Sanders Anti-Smuggling Task Force (RSASTF), allegedly when they were cutting red sanders trees on April 7.

Though the Tamil Nadu government and parties like the AIADMK, DMK, DMDK, TMC and the MDMK gave solatium to the families, there is a yawning gap between the needs of the families and what they got as relief.

In Tiruvannamalai district, 11 of the 12 victims who lost their lives were the main breadwinners.

Their impoverished widows and parents are finding it difficult to make ends meet.

With the money they got as compensation, they conducted the funeral and related rituals and are left with very little.

They are badly in need of employment.

The humble brick and mud house of Mahendran, only graduate among the victims, located near their small piece of land in Murugapadi village was built by his ancestor.

When Mahendran started earning, the family was hopeful of better days.

“His elder brother does not earn much. We were all relying on Mahendran. As he has gone, I have started tilling land myself again,” said his father Sivaji.

When this correspondent went to his place, the 60-year-old man was tilling the land.

Munusamy’s family in Murugapadi kollakottai is equally in dire straits.

The family members are living in a shed which has a roof made of palm leaves adjacent to a piece of land. His wife Thanjiyammal and mother Padma look frail. They have no men left in the family and the women have to take care of two toddlers Munusamy left behind.

“I have repaid around Rs.1 lakh loan, met the family expenditure and paid for the rituals from the solatium money. I have no idea how I am going to manage in future. As a woman I cannot go to work at least for six months, I cannot rely on wage labour.”

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