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Indian prime minister visits rural Vidarbha
Move to deflecting mounting anger over agrarian distress
By Parwini Zora
25 July 2006
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Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visited the drought-stricken
Vidarbha region of the state of Maharashtra for two days beginning
June 30 as part of a larger tour of impoverished rural areas by
Singh and other Congress Party leaders.
The tour is an attempt to deflect mounting criticism of the
Congress Party-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government
for its failure to take urgent measures to counteract an agrarian
crisis that stalks much of rural India and to recast Singh, an
economist and unabashed proponent of capitalist globalization,
as pro-poor.
One of the most poignant expressions of the agrarian crisisand
a serious blight in Vidarbhais the phenomenon of peasant
suicides.
During the past 15 years successive Indian and state governments
have slashed agricultural price supports and farmer-credit and
otherwise diverted state resources from agriculture, so as to
slash corporate taxes and fund the infrastructure projects demanded
by Indian and international capital.
In line with Indias neo-liberal, export-led growth strategy,
government authorities have also encouraged farmers to switch
to growing high-yield, fertilizer-intensive, cash crops. This
has led to a growing shortfall in Indias food-grain production,
while making small-farmers livelihoods ever more dependent
on the fluctuations in world agricultural prices.
In recent years, the 3.2 million-plus cotton-growers in Vidarbha,
a region known as Indias cotton belt, have been hard-hit
by plunging cotton prices, the rising cost of fertilizer and other
inputs, and mounting debt. These woes have been aggravated, especially
in the past year, by drought.
Official sources suggest that more than 1,600 farmers in the
region have taken their lives since January 2001, with the problem
deepening in the two years since the UPA government came to power.
According to anti-poverty activists, in the year preceding Singhs
visit, Vidarbhas farmers were taking their lives at a rate
of almost 2 per day.
The families of little more than half of the officially recognized
suicidessome 930 familieshave been deemed eligible
for a special government benefit given the relatives of peasants
who have been driven by poverty and debt to take their lives.
But to date the aid has actually been received only by some 300
families.
Prime Minister Singh toured Vidarbha in the company of Maharashtra
Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh, Union Agricultural Minister
and Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) head Sharad Pawar and Power
Minister Sushilkumar Shinde. He met farmers, widows of suicide
victims, other villagers, and local officials.

Singh told farming families of Dhamangaon and other villages
that he had been moved by their suffering and that his government
is determined to finding a lasting solution to their woes. Dear
brothers and sisters, said Singh, after what you have
told me about the difficulties that you are going through, I understand
that debt is a big problem.
Subsequently, Singh and his aides provided details of an aid
package for 31 severely distressed rural districts of Maharashtra,
Andra Pradesh, Karnataka and Kerala.
The UPA government is claiming that six districts in Maharashtras
Vidarbha region will receive 3,750 crore rupees ($800 million
US) in coming years for irrigation projects, fresh loans and loan
extensions, a waiver on overdue loan interest, economic diversification,
and support for the regions other agriculture producers.
But more than half of the money$470 millionis being
drawn from existing government schemes.
While much of the corporate media has hailed the aid package
as extremely generous, it amounts to only about $230 per cotton
growing-family, and this over as much as five years.
By contrast, the existing debt of the regions cotton
farmers is estimated at $5.3 billion, or about $1,650 per family.
Many farmers reportedly did not have the means to plant a crop
this summer. The government offer of new loans means many will
now be able to get money to buy seeds and other inputs, but only
at the cost of going deeper into debt.
Notwithstanding all his professions of concern, Singh rejected
calls for canceling the farmers debts or for increasing
the minimum support-price for cotton.
Moreover, the government has since let it be known that it
intends to press forward with liberalization of the
agricultural sector. A group of ministers headed by Parwar, the
most important UPA minister from Maharashtra, has recommended
that agriculture be opened up to 100 percent Foreign Direct Investmenta
change which will accelerate the capitalist reorganization of
Indias agricultural sector at the expense of the small producers
and landless.
In a mid-July e-mail to the World Socialist Web Site,
Kishor Tiweri, the head of the Vidharbha Public Movement Committee,
reported that Singhs visit and aid package have failed to
stem the wave of farmer-suicides. Since June 30, at least 62 Vidarbha
farmers have taken their lives.

Millions of cotton growers and their families in the
Vidarbha region, Tiweri told the WSWS, are directly
met with distress as a result of a series of local and central
government policies which slashed agricultural subsidies, dismantled
price controls and shut down state-funded cotton procurement centres.
As far as recent government policies are concerned, essential
agricultural input costs relating to water and electricity have
increased in leaps and bounds. And farmers whove been used
to [getting] water and power for decades for no or minimal charges
are now faced with rising input costs, when the return prices
of the agricultural produce are not even enough to match the expenses.
Last year the cotton procurement price stood at RS.2500/(US$54)
per quintal (100kg). Even at that price, cotton cash crops turned
to be increasingly uneconomical, making farmers face financial
losses. But this year, due to the influence of international market
prices, the rate plunged as low as 1700/(US$37) a quintal. So,
I think its not hard to imagine the devastation negative
market prices could bring on a farmer.
Tiweri called the UPAs aid-package for the Vidarbha region
an eye-wash that would do little to meet the immediate
needs of the people, let alone address the roots of the crisis.
It is a very desperate situation. ... The government should
additionally offer a scheme of providing food security to the
families of the small farmers and landless labourers, at least
providing 30 kg of wheat or food grains per month [at a cost of]
Rs.2 a kilo. Some 5,000 children belonging to the tribal population
have died so far this year in the Yavatmal district due to malnutrition.
The Indian Prime Minster has said that one reason for his touring
some of the countrys most distressed rural districts is
to make an on-the-spot assessment of how the newly-launched National
Rural Employment Guaranteed Scheme is functioning. Under this
scheme, which has been touted by the UPA and the Communist Party
of India (Marxist)-led Left Front as a major advance, one member
of every rural household in some 200 districts of India is reputedly
guaranteed 100 days of work per annum at a daily wage of 65 rupees
(less than $1.50 US).
According to Tiweri, the scheme has had no impact in Vidarbha:
If talking about this summer alone, that is during the months
of April-May-June, the local and central government did not provide
a single job for the local population, nor create employment opportunities
relating to farm labour in Vidarbha.
A recent BBC report about the village of Dhorli, whose inhabitants
have decided to put the entire village up for sale, underlines
the desperate plight of Vidarhbas farmers and their anger
at the failure of government authorities to come to their aid.
We have an abundance of land here, Dharampal Jharundhe
told the BBC. You can see that all 53 of us farmers have
land to till. But we have no water. We are at the mercy of nature.
We dont get good harvestswe have nothing to eat here.
Tell me, what are we to do? How are we to feed our families, pay
back our debts? Wed rather move to the cities, and set up
small tea-shops, or clean footpathssomething to keep our
stomachs fed.
Photographs supplied to the WSWS by the Vidarbha Public
Movement Committee
See Also:
India: Maharashtra cotton
farmers face destitution
[12 May 2006]
India: government policies
lead to terrible toll in rural suicides
[28 April 2006]
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