Babban Mahto's wait to see his two-month-old girl for the first time only seems to be getting longer.
The 27-year-old from Bihar worked as a 'beldar' (daily wager) in Seelampur in Northeast Delhi until the lockdown hit businesses, rendering him and his co-workers jobless.
"I am the only one earning in the family. First, the riots in Northeast Delhi impacted business, and now the lockdown brought the people to their knees," he says.
Babban says he was to take a train to home, in Siwan district, on May 2, which got cancelled.
On May 5, he and his co-workers from Bihar registered for free travel on 'Shramik Special' train. Two weeks later, they have no clue which train will take them home.
"We also registered on the link provided by the Delhi government two days ago. It says the application has been successfully submitted, but how do we know which train will take us home and when?" asks Jitendra Mahto, 35, who worked in a T-shirt printing unit.
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"I have only Rs 200 left with me. I have not even got the refund for the cancelled ticket. We don't have agricultural land back home. I know it will be hard there, but I will be with my family. I am happy having 'roti and chutney' with them," Jitendra says.
Salendra Kumar, 30, from Bihar's Chapra district, says he just finished watching news about the Delhi government arranging 16 special trains on Tuesday to ferry migrant workers to their native states.
"We have been waiting here for our turn," he says.
Kumar says he and his roommates, including Babban and Jitendra, left their rented accommodation at 6 am on Tuesday.
"We went to Jhandewalan Mandir, where police forced us to leave. Policemen wielding sticks ran after us when we tried taking rest near Ambedkar Stadium. From there, we went to Kamla Market only to be shooed away like dogs," he says.
Policemen told the migrant workers to return to the places they had been putting up at, he says.
"They are heartless. They are treating us like we don't belong to this country," Kumar says, wrapping his handkerchief around his head to beat the heat.
"Our landlord didn't throw us out. He said we can stay till the lockdown is lifted. But no one knows how much time it will take. Our families need us back home. I haven't seen my newborn girl yet," Babban says.
His wife is worried and called him four times already.
"We want to be in front of the eyes of our loved ones. Here, we are wandering on the roads in this heat. There is nothing to eat and nowhere to go."