Britain blamed for farmers� suicides in India
Sify News, Monday, 16 May , 2005, 16:18

London: Trade reforms backed and funded by the British
government caused an agricultural crisis in India,
leading to a large number of suicides among
impoverished farmers, particularly in Andhra Pradesh,
a leading charity in London has said.

More than 4,000 farmers had killed themselves in
Andhra Pradesh since a programme of free-market
measures was implemented by a "hardline liberalising
regime" (Chandrababu Naidu regime) with the help of
1.65 million pounds (approx Rs 84 crore) grant from
Britain�s Department for International Development
(DfiD), a study for the Christian Aid claimed.

According to the report, the dramatic increase in the
suicide rate, which saw 2,115 farmers take their lives
last year compared with 588 in 2003, is directly
linked to British support for policies joining aid to
economic liberalisation in developing economies.

"It is a scandal that the British government has
backed policies and pumped British taxpayers� money
into schemes which have contributed to poor Indian
farmers killing themselves," director of the Christian
Aid Daleep Mukarji said.

"The report shows in stark detail the damage that is
done to poor people when the dogma of so-called free
trade is pursued in the name of poverty relief," he
added.



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