Published:
March 17, 2018 9:20 am On: Kathmandu
HIMALAYAN NEWS SERVICE
- The study says begging is not their choice but compulsion.
Poverty pushed them into begging
Kathmandu,
March 16
A recent
study conducted by the Ministry of Women, Children and Social Welfare has shown
that a majority of people beg on the premises of temples in and outside the
Kathmandu Valley due to poverty.
“Though
poverty forced a section of these people to resort to begging to feed
themselves and dependents, many of them are living with family. They camp
outside the temples from dawn to dusk and reunite with their family in the
evening,” the findings of the study reveal.
In some cases, physical disabilities, senility and poor
health conditions have also pushed the deprived and excluded people to beg
outside the temples. The study shows that a person earns Rs 150 to Rs 500 daily
from begging. “Some of them were found to be making even up to Rs 2,000,” the
findings say.
The study
claimed that most of them refused the government’s offer of rehabilitation.
“Instead, they wanted the government to support them as they were not able to
meet their living costs. Begging is not their choice, but compulsion and family
poverty pushed them into begging,” it says.
The
beggars sleep in religious rest houses, tents, street and rented rooms, and
some are alone and don’t have supporting hands for their mobility. With a
sample size of only 65, the study team had interviewed them using structured
questionnaire to confirm their socio-economic, physical and mental condition in
2017. The study said they were deprived of their right to live a dignified
life.
Of the
interviewed, 18 persons said they earned up to Rs 150 a day while 14 others
said they made a daily average of Rs 151 which was too little to even feed
themselves, not to mention their dependents.
At least
46.15 per cent of them are from the hill followed by 38.46 per cent from the
Tarai and 15.39 from other countries.
Mountain
people were not seen begging on the temple premises. Similarly, a whooping
83.07 per cent are married.
The study
has recommended that the concerned authorities provide income generation
activities to those who have been begging due to poverty and make an
arrangement of shelters for helpless and incapacitated.
A version
of this article appears in print on March 17, 2018 of The Himalayan Times.
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