Mumbai street vendor to speak at Rio labour meet

Date:

Share post:

spot_imgspot_img

Mumbai: Vegetable vendor Salma fights for the rights of the city’s street vendors and has been jailed many times. Now the 26-year-old is going to an international conference in Brazil to speak about Indian domestic workers, labourers and hawkers.

Salma, whose full name is Anis Fatima Shaikh, started selling vegetables from the age of seven even as she continued to study till Class 12 as a private student, and one day she took up the cause of the street vendors after she was harassed by government officials.

“I then started to gather legal information about the rights of hawkers (street vendors) and labourers. I then helped other hawkers fight for their rights,” said Salma, a leader of the Azad Hawkers Union, a part of the National Association of Street Vendors of India (NASVI).

“I have been imprisoned on a few occasions and when I read the names of the freedom fighters on the walls of the jail, I got inspired to fight for my cause,” she said.

Salma will be attending the May 21-24 Global Network Conference in the Brazilian city of Rio de Janeiro.

“Sixty participants from 20 countries will be at the conference. It will bring together people from trade unions, labour and human rights activists from Asia, Africa, Latin America, Arab countries and Europe,” Salma told IANS in fluent English.

The Global Network is an alliance of labour organisations, established in 2001 by Solidar, a European network of NGOs working for social justice, and the International Federation of Workers’ Education Associations from South Africa.

“NASVI is associated with Global Network and suggested my name for the conference,” she said.

She will be the lone Indian representative in the conference on ‘The Role of Labour Movement in Shaping the International Cooperation Agenda after 2015’.

She is however not new to international conferences, having flown to Nairobi in Kenya to speak on child street vendors at the World Social Forum six years ago.

The second of three sisters and two brothers, Salma had to drop out of school at the age of seven to help her parents sell vegetables.

“But I never gave up studies. I kept studying through notes and books of other children. Two years back, I appeared for my Class 10 exams privately and last month I passed my Class 12 exams,” she added.

“I’m glad my parents take pride in my achievements,” she said. (IANS)

spot_imgspot_img

Related articles

No hawker eviction in West Bengal till Durga Puja, assures CM Adhikari

Kolkata, July 4: West Bengal Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari on Saturday gave an assurance that there will be...

Minister Scindia to lay foundation stone for Rs 2,500 crore Adani Group’s defence manufacturing plant in MP

New Delhi, July 4: Union Minister for Communications and Development of North-Eastern Region (DoNER), Jyotiraditya M. Scindia will...

PM Modi congratulates Trump, people of US on 250th Independence Day

New Delhi, July 4: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday congratulated US President Donald Trump and the people...

HM Amit Shah approves designation of 17 Pakistan-based individuals as ‘terrorists’

New Delhi, July 4: In keeping with Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led Central government's 'Zero Tolerance Policy' against terrorism,...