Indian Social Worker Gives Up Award in Protest
Indian social worker Sandeep Pandey gave up a prestigious award in protest over alleged corruption in a job program created to help the poor, according to this BBC article.
Pandey claims officials are stealing money from a program that guarantees 100 days a work a year for every rural home in India’s Uttar Pradesh state.
“The criminalization of politics and the influx of corruption in day to day working of government schemes is indeed very sad,” he said in a statement.
Pandey returned the the Ramon Magsaysay award he got in 2002 for projects he created to help poor children.
Social workers around the world are committed to equal economic, political and social rights and opportunities for all. To learn more, click here to the visit the National Association of Social Workers’ Social Justice Web page.
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