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* Hope Has Withered for India's Farmers. - 1 messages, 1 author
 
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/aa2a71d475ad029c

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TOPIC: Hope Has Withered for India's Farmers.
http://groups.google.com/group/BM_discussion/browse_thread/thread/aa2a71d475ad029c
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== 1 of 1 ==
Date: Mon, Aug 14 2006 3:29 am 
From: Jagannath Chatterjee  


        Hope Has Withered for India's Farmers (11/8/2006)
        Source: GM Watch Bulletin.
   
  EXCERPTS: "The costs have gone up immensely, like never before," said Arun 
Tulsiram Mahalle, 28, who lives here in Pahapal, a collection of narrow dirt 
lanes, mud homes and few modern amenities. "People can't take it anymore."
   
  His and his neighbors' crops have been of uneven, often poor quality ever 
since agriculture officials encouraged them to switch over to more expensive, 
genetically modified seeds. 
---
  Hope Has Withered for India's Farmers
As the nation touts its high-growth economy, the poor who work the land commit 
suicide. 
By Henry Chu, Times Staff Writer Los Angeles Times, August 11 2006 
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/asection/la-fg-farmers11aug11,1,5370844.story?coll=la-news-a_section
  PAHAPAL, India - He found his father's body during his early-morning chores. 
Sixteen-year-old Vijay Chatale had barely adjusted his eyes to the gloom in the 
dirt-floor kitchen when he looked up and saw his dad hanging from one of the 
rafters.
   
  Tragedy also struck the Gurnule household in the nearby village of Saikheda. 
Late one afternoon, Chandrakanta, 28, doused his clothes in kerosene, set 
himself ablaze and ran screaming into the courtyard. He died a few hours later.
   
  An epidemic is sweeping through the Indian countryside, killing farmers by 
the hundreds in the nation's vast, sun-baked heartland. What afflicts them is 
not disease or famine but despair, so deep that it is driving men such as 
Chatale and Gurnule to take their lives at the rate of two a day.
   
  Fueled by crushing debt, failing crops and government indifference, the 
suicides are a stark reminder of the desperate poverty that continues to engulf 
huge swaths of this nation of 1 billion, despite the enthusiastic portrayals of 
India at home and abroad as a software powerhouse, an outsourcing giant and an 
economic juggernaut with growth of 8% a year. 
   
  Fifteen years of market-oriented reforms have unleashed a wave of capital and 
entrepreneurialism across India. But though high-end sectors such as 
information technology have made impressive strides in cities like Mumbai and 
Bangalore, the benefits of reform have yet to extend to the hundreds of 
millions who toil on the land. 
   
  "Seventy percent of our population live in rural areas, live in hostile 
conditions," farming activist Kishor Tiwari said. "And they talk of 
'mega-India,' 'India shining'? That's a lousy picture."
   
  Falling commodities prices have put the squeeze on Indian farmers, the great 
majority of whom have only a few acres. The government also has slashed or 
phased out subsidies for some crops, shredding a key safety net.
   
  The result is a growing social crisis most bleakly illustrated by the rash of 
suicides, in states from Punjab in the north to Kerala in the south, where 
1,500 farmers are reported to have taken their lives in the last five years. 
   
  Hardest hit is this region, known as Vidarbha, an area about the size of 
Maine smack in the center of India. A map of the region hangs on Tiwari's 
office wall. Its most prominent markings are a profusion of black skulls, 
forming a grim diagram of death that keeps him and fellow activists busy day 
and night. 
   
  More than 700 farmers in Vidarbha, home to about 6 million agricultural 
laborers, have killed themselves in the last 14 months. Many drink pesticide; 
others jump down wells or hang or immolate themselves.
  The real number of suicides could be much higher, as it is unlikely that 
every case is recorded by police or the media.
   
  Nearly all the victims were cotton growers, generations of whom have 
cultivated this corner of Maharashtra state, since the time of the British Raj. 
It was once so profitable a crop that people called it "King Cotton." Now that 
tag has changed to "Killer Cotton."
   
  The farmers have been hit by a double whammy: The cost of seeds, fertilizer 
and other supplies has shot up dramatically, while the state government has cut 
its guaranteed purchase price by 32% and bought up less of the harvest, forcing 
farmers to sell low to private traders.
  Moreover, import duties on cotton have been reduced, leaving Indian growers 
at a disadvantage against cheaper American cotton, which, as critics point out, 
remains heavily subsidized by the U.S. government.
   
  "The costs have gone up immensely, like never before," said Arun Tulsiram 
Mahalle, 28, who lives here in Pahapal, a collection of narrow dirt lanes, mud 
homes and few modern amenities. "People can't take it anymore."
   
  His and his neighbors' crops have been of uneven, often poor quality ever 
since agriculture officials encouraged them to switch over to more expensive, 
genetically modified seeds. Those seeds, which produce insect-resistant plants, 
have turned out to be unsuitable for their small, non-irrigated plots, and the 
monsoons the farmers depend on to water their fields have been disappointing in 
recent years.
   
  Like virtually everyone in the village, Mahalle has had to borrow money to 
stay afloat. But he's one of the lucky ones: He received 50,000 rupees (about 
$1,100) from the bank, at a reasonable 7% interest rate. Many other farmers, 
already in default on bank loans or rejected as high-risk, have gone down a 
more perilous path.
   
  "They're mostly borrowing from private moneylenders, and the interest rate is 
exorbitant — up to 50%, 60%, more than that in some cases," said Bibhuti Bhusan 
Mohanty, an expert on rural conditions at the Gokhale Institute of Politics and 
Economics. "And it's not one year's borrowing, it's cumulative. Over the last 
two to three years they've been borrowing, and the debts are accumulating."
   
  Kachru Chatale's family knew he had borrowed from local loan sharks, but he 
never said much more. In fact, he spoke less and less as time passed, worn with 
worry and at times not eating.
   
  Last year, Chatale sold eight of his 12 acres to pay for his daughter's 
wedding, one of the biggest expenses for rural families. Then his crops failed.


    "Our ideal is not the spirituality that withdraws from life but the 
conquest of life by the power of the spirit." -  Aurobindo.




                
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