This is where there is nothing. Except misery. Where life begins with the rude jolt of a scythe and ends in an extended orgy of suffering. Where the struggle for existence centres on cultivating a small patch of rocky land perched precariously on a hill-side to enable a family to survive for six months a year. And children are not named till they are nearly two years old because the mother never knows whether the baby will survive. Where a child's most productive years are between the ages of 8 and 13, ripe, yet pliable enough, to be sold to labour. And the unholy trinity of politician, administrator and planner form a vicious nexus. The long arm of the state does not extend here, though its accompanying paraphernalia does make a cosmetic appearance in parts and makes a mockery of the official poverty line, pegged at Rs 11,000 per annum. Hunger is the norm here and human dignity, intrinsically, is not an essential to life. This is Raigada, in the interiors of Orissa.