Hyderabad clears its streets of beggars before Ivanka visit

Authorities in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad are rounding up beggars ahead of a visit by Ivanka Trump for an international conference.
Over the past week, more than 200 beggars have been transported to separate male and female shelter homes located on the grounds of two city prisons. Picture: AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.Over the past week, more than 200 beggars have been transported to separate male and female shelter homes located on the grounds of two city prisons. Picture: AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.
Over the past week, more than 200 beggars have been transported to separate male and female shelter homes located on the grounds of two city prisons. Picture: AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.

Over the past week, more than 200 beggars have been transported to separate male and female shelter homes located in the grounds of two city prisons. Officials have been strictly enforcing a begging ban on the city’s streets and in other public places.

The crackdown seems to be having the desired effect, with most of Hyderabad’s thousands of beggars vanishing from sight.

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Ms Trump is a senior adviser to her father, US President Donald Trump. Later this month, she is scheduled to be a featured speaker at the Global Entrepreneurship Summit in Hyderabad, which will also be attended by Indian prime minister Narendra Modi.

Officials said the drive against begging was launched because two forthcoming international events are taking place in the city – the entrepreneurship summit and the World Telugu Conference in December.

Begging is a criminal offence in India and can be punished by as much as ten years in prison, although the law is rarely enforced.

“We will complete the clearing of beggars from the city roads by the end of the month,” said VK Singh, a top police officer.

The beggars have been rounded up from road junctions, bus stations and railway stations and transported by van to the shelters, where they often find themselves separated from their family members.

They are being offered clean clothes, a shower and a bed. But they are also being fingerprinted before they are allowed to leave and told they could be jailed if they are found begging again. More than 20 per cent of India’s 1.3 billion people live on less than $2 (about £1.50) a day. For many, begging offers a last resort to stay alive.

Beggars tend to crowd around cars at traffic signals, knocking on windows and asking for food and money.

They include children as young as five, who weave through dangerous traffic and often perform small acrobatic acts.

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A human rights group that runs the two Hyderabad homeless shelters in the grounds of the Chanchalguda and Charalapally jails where the beggars are being taken estimates the city has 13,000 beggars.

About half of them are begging because they are living in poverty while the other half want money for alcohol and drugs, said Gattu Giri, an official with the Amma Nanna Ananda Ashram organisation.