Updated On: 19 April, 2020 07:15 AM IST | Mumbai | Anju Maskeri
The lockdown hits city's North Eastern community like a punch in the face as their physical appearance leads to shocking discrimination

Mount Mary Road resident Hoi Liethang, who works as a teacher at the International Society of Fashion Technology, faced discriminatory remarks when she stepped out to buy vegetables. Pic/Shadab Khan
Since Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that the lockdown is being extended to May 3, spa owner Leo Tharmi Raikhan's phone has been ringing incessantly. The calls are from friends who hail from the North Eastern states of Mizoram and Manipur and, like him, came to Mumbai to make a living. "Most are employed at restaurants, satellite kitchens, spas and salons. Due to the lockdown, they are surviving without salaries. And now, the landlords are threatening to throw them out," says Raikhan, 34, who runs Only and Only Spa in Kalina. His political clout as president of BJP's North Central Christian Minority cell and his semi-Mumbaikar status has made him the go-to person for the community. Over the last few days, he has been negotiating with landlords to defer payments. "Some have agreed, others haven't. Many said that the flats are their only source of money."
By his estimate, Maharashtra is now home to about one lakh persons from the North East, with a sizeable population in Mira Road, Bhayander and Navi Mumbai. With help from non-profit organisations and the BMC, he has managed to reach out to 80 per cent of them to provide essentials and groceries that will last them a week. "The Assamese population here is slightly better off than those from Nagaland, Mizoram and Manipur, because the Assamese government has been actively helping out through the state-run Assam Bhawans," he says.