Farmer’s suicide in India !
Let’s
read this, which may be supporting factor on our understanding on farmer’s
suicide:
In the 1990s India
woke up to a spate of farmers suicides. The first state where suicides were reported was Maharashtra . Soon newspapers began to report similar occurrences from Andhra
Pradesh. The government appointed a number of inquiries to look into the causes
of farmers' suicide and farm-related distress in general. The despair has deepened
over the past year with 18 of the 28 states reporting more suicides. The farmer
suicide graph has been steadily rising.
The numbers are stark and in your face: According to the National
Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) data from 2009, more than 216, 000 farmers have
killed themselves since 1997. Add the figures for 1995, 1996 and 2010 and the
total crosses 250,000. That is, two farmers a day for the past 15 years.
Veteran journalist and The Hindu Rural Affairs editor P. Sainath
says: "We have been undergoing the largest catastrophe of our independent
history — the suicides of nearly a quarter of a million farmers since 1995. We
are talking of the largest recorded rate of suicides in human history.”
Sainath was speaking at the Third Michael Sprinker Lecture on
“Death on the Farm: Agrarian crisis and inequality” at the Institute of Development
Studies in Kolkata.
Bringing to light several stark contrasts in India , where
the average CEO earns 30,000 times more than the average worker, Sainath said:
"While labor productivity rose 84 percent, real wages of laborers dropped 22
percent. The country imports wheat from Australia ,
which was importing wheat nine years ago from Punjab .
It exports 20 million tonnes of grain at Rs. 5.45/kg, whereas the same grain is
sold to the poor at Rs. 6.15/kg."
And there lies the problem, which UPA 2 calls systemic. Agriculture
Minister Sharad Pawar, whose state has the worst figures for the 10th
consecutive year, has stopped quoting NCRB figures since 2007.
In 2009, more than 17,000 farmers committed suicide, the worst
count since 2004.
But the figures could be worse, says Sainath, who first published
the story. He explains the actual numbers could be beyond a quarter million
people.
"The numbers are from the annual report of the government of India 's own
National Crime Records Bureau. Their yearly total for farmer suicides from 1995
to 2009 brings us to a total of 240,000. So even if we assume that 2010 saw far
fewer suicides than the average of the last decade, it still takes the figure
past 250,000 or a quarter of a million farmer suicides," says Sainath.
If you haven't woken up yet, now is the time.
For the 10th year on the trot, Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar's
home state has had the worst record with 2,872 farmers committing suicide, despite
the much hyped Prime Minister's relief package.
Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh follow, with
two-thirds of farmer suicides being reported from these states.
In fact, according to a written reply, MP's Home Minister, Uma
Shankar Gupta, as many as 5,838 farmers ended their lives during the period
from 2006 to 2010. Surprisingly, the Minister maintained that only six of the 5,838
farmers killed themselves due to being overburdened with debt. Prior to this, replying
to Congress Party legislator Ramnivas Rawat's query, the Home Minister said
that 89 farmers had committed suicide in 87 days since November 6, 2010. However,
Gupta added that only three of them took the extreme step due to debt.
Sainath emphasizes: "Farmer suicide is not the crisis, it is
the outcome of the crisis."
And here's how it all started.
In the 1990s India
woke up to a spate of farmers suicides. The first state where suicides were
reported was Maharashtra . Soon newspapers
began to report similar occurrences from Andhra Pradesh.
The government appointed a number of inquiries to look into the
causes of farmers' suicide and farm-related distress in general. Subsequently
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh visited Vidarbha and promised a package of Rs. 110
billion (about $2.4 billion) to be spent by the government in Vidarbha.
The families of farmers, who had committed suicide were also
offered an ex gratia grant to the tune of Rs.100,000 (about $2,000) by the
government. This figure kept varying, depending on how much criticism the
government was facing from the media and the Oppo-sition parties for being
uncaring towards the farmers' plight. But the suicides kept happening.
Initially, the suicides that began to be reported out of Vidharbha (a
cotton-growing region) were attributed to the farmers' indebtedness to money-lenders
because of the shift to the of Bt Cotton.
Farmers had to borrow money to buy the more expensive seeds. And
committed suicide when they could not pay back the money.
However, the Bt Cotton theory was soon sidelined. The major causes
that were identified were this: India was transforming rapidly into a primarily
urban, industrial society with industry as its main source of income; the
government and society had begun to be unconcerned about the condition of the
countryside; moreover, a downturn in the urban economy was pushing a large
number of distressed non-farmers to try their hand at cultivation; in the
absence of any responsible counseling either from the government or society
there were many farmers who did not know how to survive in the changing economy.
Such stresses pushed many into a corner where suicide became the only option
for them.
The problems that plagued the farmers 15 years ago are still
glaringly present today: There is little credit available. What is available is
very expensive. There is no advice on how best to conduct agriculture
operations. Income through farming is not enough to meet even the minimum needs
of a farming family. Support systems like free health facilities from the
government are virtually non-existent.
Traditionally, support systems in the villages of India have been
provided for by the government.
The despair has deepened over the past year with 18 of the 28
states reporting more suicides. The farmer suicide graph has been steadily
rising.
"I believe the issue is more systemic. Because if you are
talking about 15 years, you are talking about one and a half decades. There is
a need to hold our horses, study the report and then comment," said
Congress spokesperson Manish Tewary.
In 2007, Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar, in a written reply in
the Rajya Sabha, had said that there were more than 149,000 farmer suicides
between 1997 and 2005. However, he has not quoted NCRB numbers ever since. Nor
has he openly acknowledged the distress.
But the first step towards resolving a crisis is conceding that one
exists.
Source: Various materials from internet and The Hindu.
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