Written by Kavitha Iyer | Beed/ Parbhani | February 20, 2015 2:30 am
http://indianexpress.com/article/cities/mumbai/drought-in-marathwada-only-children-old-and-crippled-left-in-parched-villages/99/
At first, the hush over Dhamoni village in Parbhani district appears
to be of noon siesta, but then the padlocked doors appear. The annual
seasonal migration in search of employment, common in large swathes of
drought-prone Maharashtra, is more acute this year than ever before.
The village economy is facing crisis following the two droughts and a
hailstorm.

The 60-odd kacchha homes comprise the 'tanda' or extension of the
1,800-voter village, visibly more impoverished than the main Dhamoni,
and where there is almost nobody left behind, but children, the aged
and the disabled.

"Skipping school today," giggles 11-year-old Sunita Nagurao Rathod,
"because aajoba is unwell." Her 76-year-old grandfather Sakaram
Ganpati Rathod has a rasping cough in addition to the daily aches from
a limb lost to atrophy. His sons and their wives, as well as other
able relatives, are all camping as daily-wagers at a sugar factory in
Parli, some 25 kilometres away from their home.


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In his neighbourhood, 60-year-old Sonerao Rama Rathod has stayed back
to tend to the livestock -- a cow and a skeletal bullock. He has sent
both sons to the sugar factory this year after incurring losses worth
nearly Rs 4 lakh over the past 24 months.

"I sowed soyabean and cotton on my two acres and another 2.5 acres
that I rented for the kharif season. But I didn't recover a penny," he
says. He is not sowing rabi crop as his unable to get any more money
on credit.

The Maharashtra government has declared nearly 24,000 villages hit by
drought this year, and the refrain in administrative circles is that
the water scarcity this year is nowhere near as acute as it was in the
last drought in 2012-13, even though agricultural drought is severe.
However, that self-assuredness is nowhere visible in the villages of
Marathwada, where each one of the 8,000-odd villages has been declared
drought hit and where rabi sowing this year is down by 40 per cent.

"In our villages, drought is now experienced as an inability to live
here any longer," laments Kesarbai Mulay, in her late 40s. "Life as we
know it is coming to an end in the village." Five hundred to six
hundred people left the village in the last couple of months, she
says. "Weddings in our families were cancelled, either because there's
no money or because girls don't want to marry into drought-hit
villages. They'll prefer a labourer in a city to a man with a few
acres of land here." Her nephew Datta Mulay, in his late 20s, tried to
make it in the city, going as far as Pune and Mumbai after his wedding
was called off. "They make you work 12-14 hours in the city, and the
pay is Rs 8,000 a month. I couldn't do it," he says, adding that those
without any cushion stayed back for the paltry pay and back-breaking
hours, and are unlikely to come back and face creditors any time soon
.

"Forget creditors, who will ever come back and go walking two
kilometres for two handis of water everyday?" asks 45-year-old
Satvasheela Nagnath Mulay, fretting about the now-postponed wedding of
her daughter Mohini who she says is 19 but looks closer to 16. Her
husband has begun to put his small goods carrier vehicle to commercial
use, taking transportation jobs nearby. Mohini used to walk 4 km to
school in neighbouring Injegaon -- Dhamoni's school offers only Class
VII -- so she's actually game to do another round for water, but it is
rationed by whoever owns the land on which the borewell is still
functional.

At Dhamoni's two anganwadis, where 134 and 122 children below six are
enrolled, attendance is 30 per cent, a seasonal low of 40-50 per cent
exacerbated this year by families away looking for work. Kavita Bate,
one of the two anganwadi teachers, says: "This year many more have
left, and their absences are longer." At the primary school, several
children in uniform are carrying plates of khichdi home, for there's
no water in the school.
Borewells have run dry everywhere. Out of the 76 talukas, 61 are
showing a dip in water tables as of October last year. Villagers also
throw numbers about loosely -- a few dozen animals sold off, rising
substance abuse, three or four farmer suicides in the last two years,
but with doors of these households locked, there's no way to verify
immediately.

An official in the office of Divisional Commissioner in Aurangabad
admits that agragrian suicides, seen until recently as a pattern only
in Vidarbha, have been on the rise, though there is no scientific
evidence yet to join the dots unequivocally between drought, crop loss
and these deaths. In any case, the administration has begun keeping
count, though the numbers do not match the villagers' unevidenced
claims. There were 574 farmer suicides in Marathwada in 2014, Beed
leading the tally at 153. Of these, 369 were found eligible for relief
from the state. Until February 2 this year, the region has seen 56
farmer suicides, including 20 in Beed and one in Parbhani where Damoni
falls, with officials expecting the numbers to rise sharply as a harsh
summer approaches


-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU



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