* The Marie Antoinettes of Maharashtra -*
P. Sainath
http://www.hindu.com/2007/09/15/stories/2007091555451200.htm
------------------------------
*

The remarks of Shankersinh Vaghela and Vilasrao Deshmukh on Maharashtra
farmers capture the elite mindset. Those doing badly are in trouble because
of their own laziness. Killing themselves in large numbers only proves how
lazy they are.
*
------------------------------

In the good old days, a Minister or Governor getting out of something he had
said simply denied it. "I was misquoted." Or it was "a total fabrication."
Television complicates things. Cures for foot-in-the mouth-disease get messy
when you've goofed up on camera. The ruling etiquette now is: "My words were
taken out of context." Only, we are seldom told what that "context" is.

And so it was in Maharashtra this week. First, Union Textiles Minister
Shankersinh Vaghela appeared to be fighting the coming Gujarat elections in
Maharashtra. That too, at a meeting of the Cotton Brokers' Association in
Akola district. He extolled the farmers of his home State and batted for
Gujarati pride. Which is fine. His own people, both farmers and non-farmers,
are very hard-working. But then he added that the problem with farmers in
Maharashtra was that they "just sit around and don't go to their farms." He
wanted them to learn about hard work from his own State. "You must emulate
the farmers of Gujarat. Come there and see for yourselves," he said.

That these homilies were delivered in Vidharbha -- a region seeing countless
farm suicides -- was bad enough. But there was more to follow. The guardian
of the destinies of 100 million people in Maharashtra took the mike and
rubbed it in. "There is some truth in what he has hinted ... we must keep it
in mind," said Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh.

And then -- in a shot at humour -- "Our farmers here, too, are 'innovative.'
They sprinkle water on cotton, add stones to it, to increase the weight of
their yield when they bring it to market." And still more: "A farmer here is
also innovative in increasing his cotton sowing area on paper, to seek
government aid. Vidharbha farmers don't lag behind in innovation."

The Chief Minister has since said his words were taken out of context. Which
sort of obliges him to explain -- what was the context? Did he say such
things at all, in any context? His response to a channel that carried his
speech: "Nothing was said in Akola that was insulting to the farmers. Using
specific parts of the speech, the opposition is now making a mountain out of
a molehill. The speech has been used in such a way that it appears to be
insulting the farmers. Being a farmer myself I know of the hardships faced
by them. Implementing programmes for their benefit is primary for me." Which
"specific parts?" Obviously, the Chief Minister said things he would like to
distance himself from. But it is very difficult to do that when those
"specific parts" are on camera and are repeatedly being telecast. The
subsequent exercise seems to result more in damage expansion than damage
control.

The fallout has been most damaging. It was barely a month ago that Mr.
Deshmukh's own party in the State gave in a report to its Central
leadership, slamming his failures on the farm front. In Vidharbha region,
his own party workers see this speech as a blunder that will cost them
dearly. And party leaders in Delhi seem quite annoyed.

Meanwhile, a seed industry lobby has just advanced claims of stunning
success for the Vidharbha farmer with Bt cotton. Yet this presents the
leaders with a dilemma. The timing of the industry's claims is odd. It comes
when the State is struggling to polish its image on the Vidharbha front. The
claim is that the farmer in the region actually earned thousands of crores
of rupees more last year. For one thing: how did "lazy" farmers end up doing
so well? For another, that was the same year in which the State government's
own survey declared that over three fourths of farm households there were in
distress. Of course, the State survey studied 17.64 lakh farm households or
millions of people. The industry's 'sample' was less than 350 farmers in the
region.

More vital, though, is how the whole drama captures the elite mindset. Those
doing badly are in trouble because of their own laziness. If they were
hard-working, there would be no problem. Killing themselves in large numbers
only proves how lazy they are. Most top leaders of the State have not
visited a single distressed farm household of their own accord through all
this period of crisis. The same leaders always have time for Bollywood
functions. Maharashtra's top bosses met families of suicide victims -- most
reluctantly -- for the first time in 2006. That's because they had to tag
along with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on his trip to Vidharbha last year.


It's curious how Maharashtra, with its "lazy" farmers, led the country for
three or more decades in cotton and sugar production before running into
trouble. According to this government, the last season saw a gigantic
"bumper crop" of almost 350 lakh quintals of cotton. And now industry says
the next crop will exceed even that by 100 lakh quintals. Not bad for a
bunch of lazy farmers fighting floods, pest, rising input costs, falling
prices, chikangunya and their own government.

Well over 90 per cent of the State's cotton is produced in rain-fed regions.
For farmers in Vidharbha to produce the quality they do with no irrigation
is a huge achievement. More so when the State itself is plugging inputs like
Bt seed that demand more and more water. This hardly squares with their
being lazy.

Above all, the farmers of the region the two leaders were mocking have had
to contend with a government that came to power on a promise of Rs. 2700 per
quintal of cotton -- then betrayed that promise at once. So who is the cheat?
The mythical little guy wetting his cotton to make it heavier? Or a
government whose ruthless gutting of a poll promise destroyed so many lives?
Or was the Congress party's manifesto quoted "out of context?"

Yet all this is like a re-run of a very bad movie. It is what the elite like
to believe of the poor. In 2003-04, as reports on the Andhra Pradesh
suicides grew in number, many well-read persons in Maharashtra asked in
wide-eyed innocence: "what is it with these Andhra Pradesh farmers? What's
wrong with them? How come we don't have those suicides here in Maharashtra?"


Three years on, we all know better. But Mr. Vaghela, apparently, does not.
He also overlooked the "advantage" that Gujarat enjoys in two respects. It
has the biggest "parallel" or *chor* Bt seed industry. Some farmers claim
that the 'desi' Bt coming out of Gujarat works better than Monsanto's
product. So many cotton growers in Gujarat don't pay the gigantic royalties
per bag that they would to the multinational were they forced to use its
brand. In Maharashtra, a government agency is the distributor for the most
expensive Bt seed of the MNC. That's why farmers in Vidharbha in fact try to
buy the Gujarati version. Some even respectfully call it "non-royalty Bt."

Farmers in Gujarat also have up to 40 per cent irrigation, in one estimate.
Which dwarfs Vidharbha's three per cent. There is another "advantage" no
less risky. All the States going through the crisis have seen cycles of
large-scale, new generation chemical use. Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and
Vidharbha went into those cycles before Gujarat did. (And they too saw
initial gains.) The rest, we know, is history. And Mr. Vaghela, at least,
ought to learn from it. There are huge problems ahead.

Whether Mr. Deshmukh will learn is another question altogether. There have
been two years in which Vidharbha could have been turned around quite a bit.
But the laziness that came in the way was not that of the farmer. The
laziness in forgetting what your manifesto promised was also not that of the
farmer. Nor is the laziness involved in going to the region many times
without visiting the affected households. Something real leaders ought to
do.

Mr. Deshmukh's own government has made one major contribution. It carried
out the largest survey ever of its kind on farm households in the region.
Its own survey says close to 75 per cent of farm households -- or nearly
seven million people -- there are in distress. In just six districts. It
confirms that people were and are working harder and harder to earn less and
less. That some two million people are in what the survey calls "maximum
distress."

Brushing aside your own findings and holding forth on the failings of the
farmers invites public outrage. And that outrage has come, leading to the
"clarifications." The causes of farm distress have been documented many
times over both in Vidharbha and in other regions. To push the kind of
reasons Mr. Vaghela and Mr. Deshmukh have advanced is to emulate the French
Queen at the time of the 1789 Revolution who wanted to know why, if the
hungry masses did not have bread, they could not eat cake instead. Current
wisdom is that she never really said this. (Perhaps, like Mr. Deshmukh's,
her words were "taken out of context.") Either way, Marie Antoinette would
have felt at home in Maharashtra. Here we destroy the masses, not royalty.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"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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