“This photo of him would not be on the wall,” says Sheela Taare. “If he had been diagnosed in time, he would have been here today, with us.”
Below her husband Ashok’s photograph against a blue backdrop, is written, in Marathi: ‘Died on 30/05/2020’.
Ashok passed away at the KB Bhabha Hospital in Bandra in western Mumbai. The cause of death was a ‘suspected’ Covid-19 infection. He was 46 and a sanitation worker with the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai (BMC).
Sheela, 40, holds back her tears. A silence permeates the family’s 269-square foot rented flat in a Slum Rehabilitation Authority building in Chembur in eastern Mumbai. Her sons Nikesh and Swapnil, and daughter Manisha, wait for their mother to speak.
“Sometime between April 8 and 10, when the mukadam of his chowki in Bhandup was found [Covid-19] positive,” Sheela continues, “they shut that chowki and asked all the workers to report to Nahur chowki [in the same area, in the city’s S ward]. After a week, he complained of difficulty in breathing.”
Ashok worked with a team on a garbage-gathering truck, picking up waste from various collection points in Bhandup. He didn’t wear any protective gear. And he was diabetic. He tried to draw the chief supervisor’s attention to his symptoms. But his requests for sick leave and for a medical test were ignored. Sheela remembers the day she accompanied Ashok to the Nahur chowki.
“I went with him to request saheb to allow him five days leave,” she says. Ashok, she adds, had not taken any of his 21 days of paid leave. “The saheb sitting on the chair said if everybody goes on leave, who will work in this situation?”
So Ashok kept working through April and May. His co-worker, Sachin Bankar (name changed at his request), says he could see Ashok trying hard to work.










