Rubina Ali, child star of the hit movie, 'Slumdog Millionaire', steps put of her shanty as her father, Rafiq Qureshi looks on at their home flooded by sewage water, in Mumbai, India, Monday, April 27, 2009. -- PHOTO: ASSOCIATED PRESS
MUMBAI (India) - RUBINA Ali's house is flooded with sewer water, and her feet itch. She's discovered a world of creepy-crawlies in the opaque gray water: scorpions, rats and slithery creatures with lots of legs.
Two months ago, the child star of the hit movie 'Slumdog Millionaire' was worrying about what to wear to the Oscars. Now she has come home to a very different problem: How to get the fetid water out of her family's one-room shack.
NOT WITHOUT CONTROVERSY
A few days after the British tabloid News of the World reported that Rubina's father offered to sell her to one of its reporters disguised as a rich sheik, an Indian businessman who lives in Qatar came forward with an offer to pay for the girl's education through college, her family said.
'The fake sheik and the real sheik,' Rubina's father, Rafiq Qureshi said, laughing.
The 9-year-old picked up a plastic bucket Monday and began to scoop, but it was hopeless. 'There are a lot of rats,' she told The Associated Press with a shudder, standing in water above her ankles. 'In the night also.' Eight Oscars and $326 million in box office receipts have so far done little to improve the lives of the film's two impoverished child stars.
Rubina and co-star Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail have been showered with gifts and brief bursts of fame, but their day-to-day lives are little changed. In some ways, things have gotten worse: Azhar's neighbourhood has grown crowded and tense. Rubina's house is flooded.
If there is a happily ever after, Azhar and Rubina haven't found it yet. 'Slumdog' filmmakers insist they've done their best to help. They set up a trust, called Jai Ho, after the hit song from the film, to ensure the children get proper homes, a good education and a nest egg when they finish high school. They also donated US$747,500 (S$1.12 million) to a charity to help slum kids in Mumbai.
Producer Christian Colson has described the trust as substantial, but won't tell anyone how much - not even the parents - for fear of making the children vulnerable to exploitation.
Azhar and Rubina finished their first term at the English-language school the filmmakers enrolled them in and plan to return in June when classes resume.
Noshir Dadrawala, a Jai Ho trustee, said the families have been shown several apartments in Mumbai, but rejected them all. Developers promised the children houses in a fancy new development billed as an eco-friendly sanctuary of villas and high-rise apartments being built in Kerala, on India's far-southern tip. But it's nearly 1,000 miles away, and neither family wants to leave Mumbai.
The government offered them apartments closer to home, but has yet to deliver. By law, politicians cannot distribute such gifts in the run-up to national elections, which conclude next month.
The families say the D.Y. Patil International School, which offers coveted - and pricey - international baccalaureate degrees, also offered them scholarships, though school officials declined to comment. -- AP