INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Kathmandu, December 29
Kathmandu Metropolitan City, in coordination with Nepal Police, Manav Sewa Ashram and other stakeholders, has
launched a week-long awareness campaign to inform the persons who are being forced to make a living by begging about its plan to declare the
city a ‘beggar-free zone&.
The metropolis said it had launched the campaign targeting the persons living on temple and shrine premises
Hari Bahadur Kunwar, in-charge of the Department of Urban Good Governance at KMC said it also aimed at sorting out the needy and helpless
persons, orphans and street children from those who were coerced into begging on the streets by their family members.
During the campaign, a
visually-impaired man camping outside Bhadrakali temple for begging told the KMC officials that he owed Rs 600,000 to a person, and
questioned them if they would pay off the loan
&I can&t survive and feed my family without begging
I am collecting money from pedestrians and devotees to clear the loan,& he said.
A study conducted by the Ministry of Women, Children and
Senior Citizen has revealed that a majority of people begged on the premises of temples in and outside the Kathmandu valley due to poverty
&Though poverty has forced many people to resort to begging to feed themselves and their dependants, many of them are living with family
They camp outside the temples from dawn to dusk and join their family in the evening,& study report read.
In some cases, physical
disabilities, senility and poor health conditions have also forced deprived and destitute persons to beg outside temples
The study revealed that a person earned Rs 150 to Rs 500 daily from begging.
The study also showed that most of them refused the government
offer for rehabilitation.
&Begging is not their choice, but compulsion and poverty pushed them into begging,& it stated.
The beggars slept
in rest houses built on temple premises, tents, streets and rented rooms, according to the report.
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