Safety of destitutes goes for a toss in Vizag

The port city has reported several attacks on destitute women, apart from rapes and murders this year

VISAKHAPATNAM: The recent rape of a woman on the city footpath in broad daylight has brought the issues pertaining to the safety of the destitutes to the fore. This is not the first such incident as several cases of atrocities including the murder of a destitute woman at Poorna Market were reported earlier. Unreported attacks on beggars by drunk persons in One town and few other areas are said to be common.

In the late night on October 17,  a 45-year-old woman was murdered by a rag picker near the Kota Veedhi Arch in One town. A day after, it was suspected to be a murder by unidentified miscreants. But, the investigation by One Town police revealed that it was a case of sexual assault and the accused killed the woman as she resisted his advances. The city also reported a gang-rape on a destitute woman in January this year.

According to

officials from Women and Child Welfare Department, a number of women from interior areas of Vizag Agency and rural areas flee their houses after the tiff with their husbands over several domestic issues. Many of them resort to begging on the roads, traffic signals and at the railway station. 
Barring a few who manage daily wager’s job, the rest continue to live under the flyovers and on roads. Sources from Women and Child Welfare Department say that Thatichetlapalem, Kancharapalem, Madhurwada, PM Palem, Arilova and a few other areas which the destitutes have made their home. Some women even hire babies from poor parents on a daily basis and beg in the streets and crowded junctions. 

In the recent past, the city has witnessed several incidents of unidentified persons attacking the destitutes—both men and women in the areas including I-Town, II-Town, NAD Junctions, but the officials say that most of them go unreported. 

“The Women and Child Welfare Department, with the help of police, have conducted a series of drives and rehabilitated the destitute women in the Safe Houses at Chinamushivada. But, many of them are reluctant to stay there and flee citing various reasons. We have conducted a survey many a time,” says district child protection officer A Satyanarayana. The women make around `500 a day from begging, so they do not want to live in the Safe Houses, he adds. The Chinamushivada Safe House with a capacity of 50 has 30 inmates at present.

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