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* Unwilling parents, unwary orphans*

http://www.hindu.com/2007/06/22/stories/2007062250091100.htm*
*

P. Sainath

 * In Anantapur, farm suicides are fewer than they were in 2002. But they
still happen and could rise again in this fragile region. As elsewhere,
agriculture is plagued by uncertainty. *



*
*

 In some ways, it was the turning point in Andhra Pradesh. The 2002 visit of
Congress president Sonia Gandhi to the State both galvanised her demoralised
party and brought hope to families destroyed by the agrarian crisis. Chief
Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu till that moment seen as invincible by even
his opponents began to look less so.

The highlight of Ms. Gandhi's visit to the devastated Anantapur district was
a meeting where many from suicide-hit families gathered. Each was issued a
special "victim pass" for the event by Congress organisers.

Media reports of the time recall the anguish of the Congress president,
appalled by what she heard and saw. This was, after all, the State's
worst-hit district in the farm crisis. Hundreds of suicides were being
reported each year. Many had been calmly recorded as "suicide due to
unbearable stomach ache (*kadupu noppi*)." Story after painful story poured
out. One of the saddest being that of 12-year-old Jayalakshmi Palem. A keen
learner, the 7th standard student had killed herself when faced with
dropping out of school. Her father Laxminarayana, a small farmer in
Mamillaguntapalli village, could no longer pay her fees.

Other girls, too, had killed themselves under similar circumstances. In some
households, the suicide of a father was followed by that of his eldest
daughter. Often, the girl blamed herself for her father's death, feeling he
had taken such a step because he had failed to get her married.

And countless other households had seen suicides, too. The farm crisis was
eating into Anantapur. The Congress president's meeting was the big moment
for the families to be seen and heard. "Sonia Gandhi spoke to my mother,"
says 12-year-old Somashekar, younger brother of Jayalakshmi, with some
pride. He too might well have dropped out of school later on. The visit and
the public focus it got ensured he did not.

It was also the big moment for local Congressmen to be seen and heard by
their leader. To make a good impression and grab that photo-op. This, some
of them did by declaring to the media that they were "adopting" those
families that had lost their breadwinners. It was, says one officer, "a real
Kodak moment." For the families it proved a fleeting one. Five years on,
most have never seen the parents who "adopted" them. Some might-have-been
foster parents flatly deny making any such commitments. Others claim they
have done their bit and that is enough.

Jayalaksmi's own home is a fractured one. "Both her parents are across the
border in Karnataka, doing coolie work," says her grandmother P. Mangamma.
"Their four acres are lying fallow." They had Mangamma leave her own village
and move into their house here so that young Somashekar could live on and
study in this village.

"There was no option," she says. "Farming had collapsed. But even that
coolie work has since become a huge problem. Laxminarayana had a nasty fall
from a height at a construction site when the scaffolding there collapsed.
His back was injured and right now only his wife can work." So the
four-member family depends on the daily wage of one woman -- when she can
find work, in another State. And on Mangamma's old age pension of Rs.200.
"They only come back once in two or three months. And most months they can
send just Rs.200 or Rs.300 home."

Surely, this was odd. Media reports say the family was 'adopted' during Ms.
Gandhi's visit by Congress MLA J.C. Diwakar Reddy. He is now the State's
Panchayati Raj Minister. Neither Mangamma nor her grandson has any harsh
words for the Minister. They've just never seen him in their lives. In fact,
they haven't seen any of the local leaders since that meeting.

Mr. Reddy remembers it differently. He told *The Hindu* that he "did not
make any promise to adopt the family." However, he "still stands by the
commitment" that he did make. Which was, he says, that he would e ducate
Somashekar. He is "ready to deposit annually, the full amount required for
the boy's expenses towards school fee, books, clothes, and hostel charges."
The school Somashekar goes to charges Rs.2,400 a year as fees for a day
scholar. Not a small amount in this poor village.
 Curious turn

This is where it gets curious. The school is not charging the boy any fees.
The correspondent of the Sri Vignan T.M. and E.M. school, Mastan, insists,
"we have not taken any money from the boy. As his was a poor family, we did
not accept any fees at all." Well, at least not since Jayalakshmi's death
and Ms. Gandhi's visit.

Mr. Reddy says he deputed a mandal president and a village sarpanch to meet
the family after Ms. Gandhi's visit and see to the child's school needs.
But, he told *The Hindu*, "the family sought cash instead."< /p>

Mr. Reddy said he would rather "deposit the amount with the head of the
institution in the name of boy." The institution insists it takes no payment
at all in this case. And the boy's family does not claim to be making one.
Neighbours say that someone did pay a small amount the first year, after
which the school stopped charging its fee. But that was it. "So where," asks
one villager, "does this leave all these 'adoptions?'"

Anantapur is not where it was in 2002. The district did receive special
attention after the change of government in 2004. On some fronts it has seen
distinct improvements.

On others, unfulfilled promises and hardship. In this district, there are
still those dragged out of school and college by the farm crisis years ago --
and who never went back. That includes the holders of full government
scholarships forced to quit to help their families in the fields.

Farm suicides are fewer than they were in 2002. But they still happen and
could rise again in this fragile region. As elsewhere, agriculture is
plagued by uncertainty. Efforts by some groundnut farmers to switch to
vegetables, papaya, sweet lemon, and other crops have not quite worked. The
next two seasons could prove crucial, says one senior officer.

"A lot more depends on the kind of policies we adopt than on the number of
children the Ministers adopt."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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