Hyderabad housed several slums which are in horrible conditions since last 30-years. No permanent housing, pathetic living conditions, no development in these areas. The big promises before elections will remain unfulfilled hopes to them.
One of the oldest slum, Lakshmaiah Huts is a densely-packed 300-house slum where people from marginalised communities, most of them who had migrated to Hyderabad in search of employment, have lived for 30 years.
Most women living in Lakshmaiah Huts, an urban slum adjoining the Musi river in Teela Guda, Malakpet mandal, Hyderabad, wake up at around 5 am every day. Before there is any movement in the rest of the locality, these women go to the banks of the river to relieve themselves. “We go in a group of two people each. While one person goes to the toilet, the other one is guarding, preventing men from coming there. It is a nightmare,” says Varalakshmi, a resident of Lakshmaiah Huts.
Lakshmaiah Huts is a densely packed 300-house slum without a toilet facility where people from marginalised communities of Scheduled Caste, Scheduled Tribes, Backward Class and Muslims live. Most of them have migrated to Hyderabad from rural areas in search of employment. The only basic amenity these people now enjoy is potable water and electricity – but these too are also technically illegal.
Recently, Telangana Municipal Administration Minister K Taraka Rama Rao (KTR) inaugurated 288 units of two bedroom-hall-kitchen (2BHK) under the dignity housing scheme in Pilligudiselu, Saidabad. Though this has revived the hopes for permanent housing for some residents in this slum, others are more sceptical. “Our patience has died now. We have been living under these miserable conditions for so long; no government has shown an ounce of mercy to provide a permanent shelter to us,” a dejected Varalakshmi says.
The recent flood threats in Hyderabad have also made the residents anxious: firstly, because the government could demolish their huts, and secondly, due to fear of snakes and rodents. “We are scared of the floods. Last year many snakes entered our houses. We were living under constant fear,” Chennamma, the leader of the slum says.
Lakshmaiah Huts comes under the Malakpet constituency, the legislator of which is Ahmed bin Abdullah Balala of the AIMIM. #KhabarLive has reached out to the MLA for his comments on the issue, and will update this story with his response. #KhabarLive #hydnews