Muslim women struggle to live in abandoned, Hyderabad. Hyderabad News – Times of India

Hyderabad: Most Muslim women from the city Abandoned To avoid the consequences of triple talaq by their husbands, they either have low income or beg for survival.
Desperate for money, food and shelter, many have taken to odd jobs, living on less than Rs 2,000 a month or have temporarily moved in with their families and relatives, as one of the city’s socialites A recent survey conducted by women members of the organization reveals.
About 350 women living in different colonies of Shaheen Nagar were included in the study of social organization.
Nikhat Begum of Helping Hands Foundation said, “Although the survey is limited to a pocket, it reflects the situation that most of these women are in today.”
At least 45% of the respondents are victims
Their findings suggest that at least 45% of the respondents – those between the ages of 18 and 35 – are victims of abandonment. Nikhat said, “Recently the number has increased, it is a result of the ban on instant divorce.
Shaheen Begum, who is almost suddenly stranded, one of them has started working in a farm. The 40-year-old said, “I earn a maximum of Rs 100 per day and that is not enough to just take care of three children and myself.” His daughter, who is also divorced recently, has taken up some sewing work to support the family.
Many little girls have started peeling garlic, which earns them Rs 25 per kg, become domestic servants or engage in jobs for cloth merchants. His salary is also bad. “I get orders for only two or three kilograms of garlic. Not only is the money insufficient, but it also damages the skin,” said another woman from Habib Nagar.
The foundation’s founder, Mujtaba Hassan Askari, acknowledged receiving a “constant influx of cases of abandonment of women from disadvantaged sections in search of social support”. Speaking about the shocking revelations of the survey, he said: “By bypassing the law, men are pushing women into deep social tension because all their legal rights like ‘Mehr’, which is like a social safety net, go unpaid. are,” he said. ,

,