Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Submit Guest Post

‘No cemetery, no vote', Mumbai's Christian voters warn ahead of polls

CHRISTIAN voters in the Indian city of Mumbai have demanded more burial grounds ahead of national elections next month, claiming they are being forced to pile bodies on top of each other due to overcrowding in cemeteries.

India will hold a general election from April 11 and campaigning is now in full swing, with job security, hardship among rural communities and tackling terrorism the key talking points so far.


Christians total 2.3 per cent of India's 1.3 billion population, and an estimated 900,000 of the community live in the country's financial capital Mumbai and its satellite cities, according to Christian associations.

Mumbai Christians want to get their voices heard and add burial grounds to the list of election topics.

"We are going to meet the candidates and make a strong pitch for burial grounds," Kasber Augustine, a member of the Bombay Catholic Sabha said.

The community's members met at the weekend to discuss the problem and on Tuesday (26) launched the #NoCemeteryNoVote hashtag to help publicise their demands.

"The community has no option but to bury one body over the other. We do shroud burials now to save space," Augustine said.

There are six public cemeteries in Mumbai and three in its neighbouring district of Thane, considered a Mumbai suburb.

To make effective use of space, the community uses shrouds instead of wood coffins, digs out the remains after about two years once the body is decomposed.

The remains are deposited into miniature vaults, but their numbers are also running low.

Community members said that bodies are rarely decomposed when another comes for burial, leading to an unpleasant experience for family members who see the remains of their loved ones juggled to make space.

"You don't have a dignified living. And then you don't have a dignified death," said Dolphy D'souza, former national vice-president of the All India Catholic Union.

With a population of about 18 million, overcrowding is an everyday affair in Mumbai - from packed trains, traffic congestion and cramped housing.

In death, people should get peace and space, said Christian community's members, adding that previous promises made by authorities to provide more cemetery space had not been kept.

Parliamentarian Rajan Vichare of regional party Shiv Sena that controls the civic bodies of Mumbai and Thane said work on a new burial ground in Thane was nearing completion.

"Nothing happens overnight. It will be ready in another six months. I will be mentioning this during my election speeches," said Vichare, who will be contesting the elections this year.

(Reuters)

Add EasternEye As Your Trusted Source
preferred source on google news

More For You

UK Temperature

Warm weather is set to spread across parts of the UK, bringing both sunshine and the risk of storms

iStock

UK heatwave fears grow as temperatures set to hit 28°C

  • Temperatures could climb to 28C in parts of England by Thursday.
  • A yellow heat health alert has been issued for several regions until June 22.
  • Forecasters say warmer-than-average conditions could continue into the summer.

The UK weather forecast is turning noticeably warmer this week, with temperatures expected to climb to 28C in parts of England as forecasters monitor the possibility of a prolonged spell of hot weather.

The warmer conditions have prompted the UK Health Security Agency to issue a yellow heat health alert covering London, the South East, the East of England and the East Midlands from 3pm on June 17 until 8pm on June 22. While the hottest conditions are expected in southern parts of the country, forecasters say thunderstorms and rain showers could also develop as humidity builds.

Keep ReadingShow less