In its report, the Committee said it was "extremely dissatisfied" by the logic given by the ministry for limiting enhancement of cash relief to the migrants.
According to official data, as many as 59,442 Kashmiri Pandit families have been registered as migrants with 38,119 registered in Jammu, 19,338 in Delhi and 1,985 in the rest of the country.
"The Committee is extremely dissatisfied by the logic given by the Ministry for limiting enhancement of the relief by Rs 400 per soul" despite claim made by the Government that the thrust of providing cash relief was to minimise hardships of migrant families.
"The Committee in this background fails to understand how a meagre enhancement of Rs 400 per soul would be able to fight the inflationary pressures in a big city like Delhi. The Ministry's decision to totally disregard State Government's recommendation for enhancement of the relief to Rs 10000 per family is unfortunate.
Expressing its displeasure on several counts, the Committee made it clear that the Union Home Ministry, being the nodal agency, "cannot shirk its responsibility for not being able to improve the situation on the ground".
"The Committee is of the view that the situation of migrants still remains neglected several years after the exodus started. It may be due to extreme difficulty in resettlement or wrong policies, but whatever may be the case the situation on the ground remains grim," it said and asked the ministry to have a re-look at the polices that have not worked.
On the health issue, the committee noted that only Rs 57 lakh had been disbursed from the corpus fund of Rs five crore created in 2007.
"The sub-committee, during the visit to different Migrant camps in Srinagar and Jammu learnt that several members of the affected community were suffering from deadly diseases like cancer, kidney failure, etc., and need immediate help," the report said.
Expressing surprise that only 200 claims had been received since 2007, the Committee said "this looks unbelievable considering the fact that the migrants are living in poor financial conditions" and asked the government to look into the reasons for limited coverage of the scheme.
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