On Friday, 10 July 2026, hundreds of Anganwadi and mid-day meal workers staged a massive demonstration outside the Deputy Commissioner’s (DC) Office in Raichur, Karnataka, as part of a statewide “Black Day” observation.
Organised by the Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU), the protest saw frontline welfare workers blocking the entrance to the administrative headquarters while raising slogans against both the Central and State Governments. The agitators are demanding an immediate hike in wages, enhanced budgetary allocations to counter skyrocketing food costs, social security benefits, and the total rollback of the National Education Policy (NEP).
While government officials have yet to issue a definitive policy shift or formal reconciliation package, the union leadership has issued a stern warning that the agitation will be intensified across the state if their long-pending demands are not met immediately.
A Cry From The Kitchens
The blockading of the Raichur administrative office highlights the extreme financial distress experienced by the individuals responsible for sustaining India’s rural nutritional safety nets. Protesters highlighted that while the cost of essential groceries, LPG cylinders, and vegetables has multi-folded, the financial allocations earmarked for the Mid-Day Meal Scheme have remained static, forcing workers to manage under impossible constraints.
Demonstrators expressed deep concern over the declining number of beneficiaries at Anganwadi centres and strongly condemned the government’s recent directive to introduce Lower Kindergarten (LKG) and Upper Kindergarten (UKG) classes in government schools, a structural change they argue fragments the traditional childcare system.
“Even after nearly 50 years of institutional service, neither adequate wages nor formal allowances have been provided to us,” stated Sudarshana Sharma, Vice-President of the Anganwadi Workers Association, during a parallel solidarity address. She added that any minor increase announced by authorities amounts to a pittance, leaving ageing workers entirely devoid of financial security, gratuity, or pension schemes upon retirement.
#WATCH | Koppal, Karnataka | Mid-Day Meal Cooks Stage Protest, Block District Administration Office
— ANI (@ANI) July 10, 2026
Mid-day meal cooks stage a protest and lay siege to the Koppal district administration office, demanding a hike in their monthly remuneration, alleging that their wages have not… pic.twitter.com/2PhYD0xLFL
A Legacy Of Systemic Neglect
This recent mobilization in Karnataka is part of a broader, national wave of discontent brewing among India’s unrecognised care workforce. Just last month, hundreds of Anganwadi staff and helpers in Himachal Pradesh executed a similar gherao (encirclement) of the state Secretariat, demanding immediate Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) enrollment, gratuity rights, and humane service conditions.
For decades, successive administrations have treated these essential workers as mere “voluntary helpers” or “honorary staff” to bypass statutory minimum wage laws and formal employment benefits, despite utilizing them for critical community health, immunization drives, and early childhood education. Union leaders present at the Raichur rally argued that the top-down implementation of the National Education Policy (NEP) actively undermines existing public welfare frameworks.
By shift-loading additional pedagogical burdens onto underpaid workers without offering matching financial support or official recognition, the policy is pushing an already vulnerable and predominantly female workforce to the brink of systemic collapse.
The Logical Indian’s Perspective
It is deeply concerning that the very people who ensure our nation’s children do not go to bed hungry are forced onto the streets to beg for basic human dignity. Anganwadi and mid-day meal workers are not peripheral volunteers; they are the foundational pillars of India’s public healthcare and rural education systems.
Denying them fair wages, healthcare protection, and post-retirement security while expecting them to single-handedly execute massive national directives like the NEP is a profound structural injustice. A society that aspires to rapid economic progress cannot build its future on the back of exploited, underpaid female labour.
True growth is rooted in empathy, harmony, and social equity; it requires our governing systems to engage in constructive dialogue and uplift those at the grass-roots level. We urge the authorities to move past bureaucratic stalling and directly address these legitimate demands with the kindness and urgency they deserve.
What steps do you believe the government must take to permanently resolve the systemic exploitation of frontline welfare workers and ensure their financial security?
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