Truant
monsoon claims three more vidarbha farmers’ suicides in 48 hrs
Nagpur-21st July 2012
The erratic progress of the
monsoon and failure second times sowing
of rain sensitive Bt.cotton seed has claimed three distressed farmers from
Vidarbha commit suicide in the last 48 hours alone and ill fated farmers whose
cases reported are identified as
1.Dhyaneshwar Golhar of village ashti in Yavatmal
2.Subhash Todase of village Mira in Yavatmal
3.Ravindra Hule of village Wadegoan in Akola
More than 3 million cotton
farmers who are credit starved and delayed rain has already damaged more than
25% kharif yield and rains are delayed further, there could be a
sharp increase in the tally of farmers’ suicides in Vidarbha from 438 from
January this year, Kishore Tiwari of Vidarbha Jan Andolan Samiti informed in
press release today
“An arid Vidarbha has had erratic rains since
2010. This year, too, the second week of June saw very heavy rains in some
blocks. This was followed by normal monsoon as forecast by the metrological
department. On cue, farmers finished sowing, only to face a complete dry spell
for 20 days then we got heavy rain in first week of July forcing dry land cotton farmers second sowing but
this time too, They were forced to watch the heat scorch both their freshly resown
crop and recent dry spell and when their re-sowing has been lost ,debt trapped
and distressed farmers are killing themselves ”Tiwari added.
Tiwari takes umbrage at Agriculture
Minister Sharad Pawar’s comment who is busy in power sharing and
protecting the
corrupt NCP Ministers, that the delay in monsoon is not a matter of
concern.
“Coming on the heels of the National Crime Records Bureau’s announcement
that Maharashtra saw the largest number of farmers’ suicides
in 2011, this seems not only insensitive, but is also a mockery of the
farmers’
distress.”
Official figures show that less
than 25% of the over three million cotton farmers are covered by institutional
banks and that crop loan disbursement target is less than 40% of Nabard’s
(National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development) credit outlay to the
region. “The government knows credit crunch is the real issue and
credit-starved, debt-trapped farmers are being pushed to end their lives, but
we haven’t seen the government being pro-active in this regard,” alleges
Tiwari. “At least now, it should intervene and restructure crop loans.”
“The water in dams and reservoirs
is fast depleting. Ground water levels have dropped due to over-exploitation.
Those moving away from cotton and soya, which ruin both the ecosystem and their
lives, to traditional crops which require less water, like pulses, groundnut,
jowar and bajra, should be given incentives,” he urges.
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