<p>An atmosphere of gloom is palpable among the vendors, most of whose families live off their daily income, as the thought of losing a month's unemployment is a scary proposition.<br /><br />"What will I do? One whole month is a lot of time, I have got a family to feed, money to pay, where will I go?" asked Kamlesh Nath, an affected vendor who sells vegetables and earns Rs.300 a day.<br /><br />Also among those affected is 45-year-old Ganga Ram, a tobacco vendor in one of south Delhi's posh colonies. He had hoped the Oct 3-14 event would provide added earnings, but now his expressionless face tells another tale altogether.<br /><br />"Police came to me and told me to shut my shop Oct 1-31 because of the Commonwealth Games," a distressed Ram, who earns Rs.400 a day by selling cigarettes, told IANS.<br />The Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) claims it has not started any new drive and any clampdown is a result of squatting on public land and not due to the Games.<br /><br />"We haven't started any such drive in the name of the Commonwealth Games. Even if any clampdown is conducted, it may be because of illegal encroachment," a senior MCD official told IANS, but did not wish to be identified.<br /><br />He said vendors who were running into problems were those who did not have proper vending licenses, known as tehbazaris in local parlance.<br /><br />But police did not deny the move outright. A senior police official said: "Such drives go on from time to time. Whenever the MCD needs our help, we send our personnel."<br />Even residents of the city have expressed reservations about such a move, which they claim is purely for the Commonwealth Games and not for illegal encroachments, as some of the vendors have been present for over a decade in many areas.<br /><br />"This is not fair. We depend on these people for everything - from vegetables to fast food. They have been here for such a long time. This has really changed my perception of the Games from bad to worse," Vasant Kunj resident Vickramjeet Singh said.<br /><br />Major factors which work in the favour of lakhs of such vendors are they pay the local Residents' Welfare Associations (RWA) a monthly fee which is an integral part of the local economy and they provide a key distribution and marketing point.<br /><br />"I have been over here for 15 years. For that time I paid all my dues, taxes, fares and what not, just to work without causing a hindrance or disturbance to anyone," Ram said.<br />Not only vendors, even autorickshaw drivers and domestic helps have expressed apprehensions about what may happen to their livelihood when the Commonwealth Games arrive.<br /><br />"We have a very strong apprehension that many of us won't be allowed to work. In that case, we have to leave the city," said 34-year-old autorickshaw driver Prakash Sharma.<br />Jayati Ghosh of the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) said: "No matter how small the spectrum of services they may provide, it forms a crucial part of the national capital's economic system, without which the city may come to a grinding halt.<br /><br />"Why is it that the downtrodden part of society has to pay for such Games?" Ghosh told IANS angrily.<br /><br />With sharp criticism surrounding the Games for incomplete stadiums and infrastructure, the main concern for some is that the city may lose its essence.<br /><br />"Delhi was better. At least no one was called an outsider, now look at this, it will become just like Mumbai," Sharma said.<br /><br />"It's not 'Garibi hatao, it's Garibon ko hatao' (It's not about poverty alleviation but the elimination of the poor altogether)," he added.<br /><br />Some 7,000 participants and officials from 71 teams are expected to attend the Commonwealth Games - India's biggest sporting event since the 1982 Asian Games, though negative publicity in the run-up may considerably deplete the number of visitors from abroad.<br /></p>
<p>An atmosphere of gloom is palpable among the vendors, most of whose families live off their daily income, as the thought of losing a month's unemployment is a scary proposition.<br /><br />"What will I do? One whole month is a lot of time, I have got a family to feed, money to pay, where will I go?" asked Kamlesh Nath, an affected vendor who sells vegetables and earns Rs.300 a day.<br /><br />Also among those affected is 45-year-old Ganga Ram, a tobacco vendor in one of south Delhi's posh colonies. He had hoped the Oct 3-14 event would provide added earnings, but now his expressionless face tells another tale altogether.<br /><br />"Police came to me and told me to shut my shop Oct 1-31 because of the Commonwealth Games," a distressed Ram, who earns Rs.400 a day by selling cigarettes, told IANS.<br />The Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) claims it has not started any new drive and any clampdown is a result of squatting on public land and not due to the Games.<br /><br />"We haven't started any such drive in the name of the Commonwealth Games. Even if any clampdown is conducted, it may be because of illegal encroachment," a senior MCD official told IANS, but did not wish to be identified.<br /><br />He said vendors who were running into problems were those who did not have proper vending licenses, known as tehbazaris in local parlance.<br /><br />But police did not deny the move outright. A senior police official said: "Such drives go on from time to time. Whenever the MCD needs our help, we send our personnel."<br />Even residents of the city have expressed reservations about such a move, which they claim is purely for the Commonwealth Games and not for illegal encroachments, as some of the vendors have been present for over a decade in many areas.<br /><br />"This is not fair. We depend on these people for everything - from vegetables to fast food. They have been here for such a long time. This has really changed my perception of the Games from bad to worse," Vasant Kunj resident Vickramjeet Singh said.<br /><br />Major factors which work in the favour of lakhs of such vendors are they pay the local Residents' Welfare Associations (RWA) a monthly fee which is an integral part of the local economy and they provide a key distribution and marketing point.<br /><br />"I have been over here for 15 years. For that time I paid all my dues, taxes, fares and what not, just to work without causing a hindrance or disturbance to anyone," Ram said.<br />Not only vendors, even autorickshaw drivers and domestic helps have expressed apprehensions about what may happen to their livelihood when the Commonwealth Games arrive.<br /><br />"We have a very strong apprehension that many of us won't be allowed to work. In that case, we have to leave the city," said 34-year-old autorickshaw driver Prakash Sharma.<br />Jayati Ghosh of the Centre for Economic Studies and Planning at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) said: "No matter how small the spectrum of services they may provide, it forms a crucial part of the national capital's economic system, without which the city may come to a grinding halt.<br /><br />"Why is it that the downtrodden part of society has to pay for such Games?" Ghosh told IANS angrily.<br /><br />With sharp criticism surrounding the Games for incomplete stadiums and infrastructure, the main concern for some is that the city may lose its essence.<br /><br />"Delhi was better. At least no one was called an outsider, now look at this, it will become just like Mumbai," Sharma said.<br /><br />"It's not 'Garibi hatao, it's Garibon ko hatao' (It's not about poverty alleviation but the elimination of the poor altogether)," he added.<br /><br />Some 7,000 participants and officials from 71 teams are expected to attend the Commonwealth Games - India's biggest sporting event since the 1982 Asian Games, though negative publicity in the run-up may considerably deplete the number of visitors from abroad.<br /></p>