Cutting across dark alleys and dilapidated roads, Minara Begum’s house in the Madanpur Khadar area of New Delhi is a small room, made of scrap, tin sheets, and a tarpaulin roof, separated by faded curtains to make space for bathing. There are no toilets in any of the 60 homes in this sparse settlement spread across 500 yards near Kalindi Kunj police station. Minara lives with her two kids—eight and seven years old. A fire in 2018 in the Rohingya settlement destroyed the grocery shop that helped them earn their livelihood. “My husband was under a lot of tension and stress after we lost the shop. He died of a heart attack in 2019,” she says.