farmers right | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Thu, 13 Apr 2023 10:42:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png farmers right | SabrangIndia 32 32 An AIKS Struggle Convention at Dahanu, Palghar where vows were taken to intensify struggles around land and farmer rights https://sabrangindia.in/aiks-struggle-convention-dahanu-palghar-where-vows-were-taken-intensify-struggles-around/ Thu, 13 Apr 2023 10:42:36 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2023/04/13/aiks-struggle-convention-dahanu-palghar-where-vows-were-taken-intensify-struggles-around/ Two conventions, Dahanu and Pa;ghar, Maharashtra were widely attended by women and men small and large farmers who took these vows; the first day, April 11 was the founding day of the AIKS apart from being the birth anniversary of Mahatma Jotirao Phule

The post An AIKS Struggle Convention at Dahanu, Palghar where vows were taken to intensify struggles around land and farmer rights appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
AIKS

Over 50 leading activists from Vasai tehsil of Palghar district and the adjoining Bhiwandi tehsil of Thane district, some of whom were village Sarpanches and Gram Panchayat members, who were with the left 17 years earlier but had since been in other political formations, once again attended this convention organized by the All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS). They were warmly welcomed by giving them a red scarf and a red rose each, amidst cheers from the wider crowd. They will now first begin working in the AIKS and other mass fronts.

This Struggle Convention organized by the AIKS at Ashagad in Dahanu tehsil of Palghar district on 11 April, which is also the foundation day of AIKS, apart from being the birth anniversary of Mahatma Jotirao Phule. Over 1500 peasants attended, including a large number of women and youth.

The Convention was addressed by Dr Ashok Dhawale, Dr Ajit Nawale, Kisan Gujar, Vinod Nikole, MLA, and others. It decided to intensify the struggle on various vital land issues and other peasant issues.

AIKS

AIKS Struggle Convention at Wada, Maharashtra on April 12

A AIKS Struggle Convention was also held at Kiravli in Wada tehsil of Palghar district on the next day, April 12. Over 1300 peasants attended from 7 tehsils, including a large number of women and youth.  The Convention was addressed by Dr Ashok Dhawale, Dr Ajit Nawale, Kisan Gujar, Vinod Nikole, MLA, Kiran Gahala, Chandu Dhangda, and others. It decided to intensify the struggle on various vital land and other peasant issues.

AIKS

AIKS

Related:

Adivasi and other farmers under the AIKS bring Maharashtra govt to its feet

AIKS Congratulates Kisans of Maharashtra for the Victory of the Long March

With a 17-point demand charter, AIKS-led 10,000-strong Kisan Long March starts in Nashik

The post An AIKS Struggle Convention at Dahanu, Palghar where vows were taken to intensify struggles around land and farmer rights appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
If Demands Unmet, We Will Unseat the Govt: Gujarat Farmers Challenge https://sabrangindia.in/if-demands-unmet-we-will-unseat-govt-gujarat-farmers-challenge/ Tue, 03 Jan 2017 06:52:56 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/01/03/if-demands-unmet-we-will-unseat-govt-gujarat-farmers-challenge/ Khedut Vedna Yatra (A footmarch to highlight farmers’ distress in Gujarat) culminated on Monday, January 2; If promises breached, farmers prepared to unseat the government   Image: bilkulonline.com   It is an interesting time politically in poll-driven Gujarat, the state that the RSS-driven Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has controlled, virtually un-contested from 1998. It is also […]

The post If Demands Unmet, We Will Unseat the Govt: Gujarat Farmers Challenge appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
Khedut Vedna Yatra (A footmarch to highlight farmers’ distress in Gujarat) culminated on Monday, January 2; If promises breached, farmers prepared to unseat the government  

Gujarat farmers
Image: bilkulonline.com
 
It is an interesting time politically in poll-driven Gujarat, the state that the RSS-driven Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has controlled, virtually un-contested from 1998. It is also been come to be regarded as prime minister Narendra Modi’s personal bastion, even as BJP stalwarts LK Advani and Keshubhai Patel also contributed significantly to the saffron turnaround of the state.
 
Monday, January 2, was the final day of the Khedut Vedna Yatra (A footmarch to highlight farmers’ distress in Gujarat), when determined Gujarati farmers marched 450 kilometres on foot led by Sagar Rabari and Pinakin Dhamelia of Khedut Samaj-Gujarat. Eighteen hundred 2000 farmers from Gir, Junagadh, Rajkot, Bhavnagar, Botad, Surendranagar, Ahmedabad, Banakantha, Aravali Bardoli and Surat districts joined them at Vaishnodevi circle to march towards Gandhinagar. This is not an insignificant number.
 
The farmers marched in a disciplined manner in a file of 2. They were stopped by the police near village Tarapur. They were told that the CM would not be available but an officer would come to them to receive the memoranda and a meeting with the CM would be fixed in the coming 4-5 days.
 
Ironically for the farmers, the VGGS – the land and water-guzzling monster and their nemesis – is the reason why no one, beginning with the CM and the senior ministers or the senior officers, has any time to spare to listen to the farmers or their vedna. A copy of the memorandum may be read here.
 
The farmers have demanded that Gujarat CM –Vijay Rupani, a replacement for the Modi-favourite Anandibeh Patel unseated after the Una agitation in August last year –meet them within the next three to four days.
 
Protesting peacefully, the farmers still retain the vain hope that the state government will not only meet them but will also meet their long-standing demands. If the government however fails to keep its promise, they are faced with a dilemma, Where does the agitation go from here?
 
The farmers have employed all possible democratic means – rallies, demonstrations, fasts, foot marches – to raise their issues.
 
Boycott Ruling Party Reps in coming polls if Farmer Demands Not met
If the government breaks its promise once again, what then? In that case, the farmers have decided to employ the ultimate weapon in a democracy – their franchise. Farmer representatives and leaders will tour villages and districts to relate the tale of government neglect and breach of promise. They will then proclaim to the people: “Vote for anyone except the present regime which has worked to destroy farmers and agriculture” and
 
“Do not allow the representatives of the present regime to enter the villages for canvassing”. The farmers will be left with no option but to remove, by root and limb, the drunk-on-power present regime.
 
The protest gathering has dispersed with a solemn vow to combat this anti-farmer regime and to put their might behind this task.

The post If Demands Unmet, We Will Unseat the Govt: Gujarat Farmers Challenge appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
In Marathwada, a bank’s humiliating ‘Gandhigiri’ tactics tighten the squeeze on desperate farmers https://sabrangindia.in/marathwada-banks-humiliating-gandhigiri-tactics-tighten-squeeze-desperate-farmers/ Mon, 19 Dec 2016 07:26:14 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2016/12/19/marathwada-banks-humiliating-gandhigiri-tactics-tighten-squeeze-desperate-farmers/ As demonetisation woes deepen, an Osmanabad bank is doing little to recover Rs 352 crores owed by two sugar factories, but is threatening 20,000 farmers. Image: P Sainath   The bank has “decided to use Gandhigiri to try and recover the loans [from you]. For this the bank has decided to do one of the […]

The post In Marathwada, a bank’s humiliating ‘Gandhigiri’ tactics tighten the squeeze on desperate farmers appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
As demonetisation woes deepen, an Osmanabad bank is doing little to recover Rs 352 crores owed by two sugar factories, but is threatening 20,000 farmers.

marathwada farmers
Image: P Sainath
 

The bank has “decided to use Gandhigiri to try and recover the loans [from you]. For this the bank has decided to do one of the following:

1) Put up a tent opposite your house to protest
2) Make use of a band
3) ring bells.

Due to these actions, your standing and image in society are likely to be in danger.”

That is the Osmanabad District Central Cooperative Bank promising 20,000 of its clients public humiliation and ridicule. Those clients, mostly farmers, have seen many years of distress. Sometimes from crop failure, sometimes from a glut or price crash. A crippling drought and water crisis have further hit their loan repayments. On top of that, the government’s recent scrapping of Rs 500 and Rs 1,000 notes has left them unable to pay their labourers’ daily wages. “Farm workers have not been paid a single paisa in cash since November 9,” says SM Gavale, a small farmer from Khed village. “All are hungry.”

The bank’s letter (see translated excerpts at the end of this story) tells farmers they are to blame for its depositors being unable to withdraw cash. And warns them: “You should be aware that if any depositors commit suicide for such reasons, you will be held responsible…”

In this situation, village visits by bank recovery teams that threaten farmers and their families spur mounting tension and despair. Oddly, the 20,000 farmers together owe the Osmanabad District Central Cooperative Bank some Rs 180 crores. Just two sugar factories, Terna and Thuljabhavani, together owe the same bank Rs 352 crores. But the tactics the bank plans to use on small peasants vanish when it comes to companies controlled by the powerful. “The factories are shut,” says the bank’s executive director Vijay Ghonse Patil. So no ‘Gandhigiri’ there. Nor has the valuable land these outfits own been seized or auctioned by the bank.

“This Gandhigiri plan was inspired by Shri Arun Jaitley’s speech.” So says Ghonse Patil, author of the letter that has sparked outrage in the villages. Speaking to us at the bank’s headquarters in Osmanabad town, he defends his action: “It draws on the Union finance minister’s warning of action against defaulters during Parliament’s budget session.”

Left: Vijay Ghonse Patil, executive director of the Osmanabad District Central Cooperative Bank, at the bank’s headquarters in Osmanabad town. Right: A farmer in Lohara block explains the problems they face.
Left: Vijay Ghonse Patil, executive director of the Osmanabad District Central Cooperative Bank, at the bank’s headquarters in Osmanabad town. Right: A farmer in Lohara block explains the problems they face.

“I drafted the letter,” says Ghonse Patil. “And I am serious about it. We need to bring non-performing assets below 15% [of total advances] by March 2017. I have to pursue this strongly. I have no other way.” He admits it was drafted without legal advice and “submitted to the Bank’s Board of Directors, which okayed it”.

Several of the letters bear an October date but the farmers scoff at this. “They were delivered at our homes after November 15.” In other words, these letters came out after demonetisation was announced on November 8. Ironically, one of those sent the letter on December 2 was Manohar Yelore. He was a small farmer in Lohara village who committed suicide in 2014, unable to repay the Rs 68,000 he had borrowed from the bank.

In Nagur village of Lohara block in Osmanabad, farmers gathered from many villages tell us they are shaken: “We will have no option but to take our lives if subjected to such humiliation.” In the state government’s own count, Osmanabad and Yavatmal rank as the worst districts for farmer suicides in Maharashtra. And the state itself has suffered more farm suicides than any other in the country – at least 63,000 between 1995 and 2014, according to the National Crime Records Bureau.


Video: Farmers from Nagur, Khed, Kasti and other villages display the letter from the Osmanabad District Central Cooperative Bank threatening to humiliate them with ‘Gandhigiri’ tactics; November 29, 2016.

Here, demonetisation has hit both the bank and its clients alike. The cash crunch has squeezed both. Cooperative banks were allowed to accept the banned notes and exchange them for new ones for only three days. All other banks could do this till November 29. The Osmanabad District Central Cooperative Bank was already in big trouble with its giant defaulters repaying not a paisa of the Rs 352 crores they owe. “And they’re taking it out on us,” say farmers here. “We are people who’ve tried to repay something.”

With no cash at all, the farmers, labourers and shopkeepers here have worked out a fragile survival strategy after November 9. SM Gavale of Khed explains it: “If the labourers don’t have cash, they cannot eat. But we stand guarantee for them with the shopkeepers. They pick up provisions on credit.”

The local shop owners themselves are bringing in their stocks on credit from wholesalers based elsewhere. So the labourer, the farmer and the shopkeeper could all be locked into a disaster waiting to happen.

In Nagur village, agitated farmers explain that the loan amounts have been inflated.

In Nagur village, agitated farmers explain that the loan amounts have been inflated.

There’s another huge problem. A few years ago, the bank started collapsing “crop loans” and “term loans” and rewriting the figure of what was owed by the farmer. The Osmanabad District Central Cooperative Bank seems to have done this repeatedly over several years. The result is an explosion in the size of the amounts owed by farmers. It is these inflated loan figures the letter asks the farmers to repay. Indeed, the Rs 180-crore sum the 20,000 farmers together owe is a post-”re-phasement” figure. The original amount borrowed by them was Rs 80 crores.

A crop loan is a short-term borrowing by farmers in the form of cash credit. This is directly tied to their immediate agricultural activity or season. They might buy their seeds, fertiliser, pesticide and other inputs, and pay labourers, from of this sum. They withdraw cash against this loan as and when required, within the limit of the sanctioned sum. Interest rates on crop loans normally don’t exceed 7% (of which 4% is to be borne by the state government). These loans have to be renewed each year.

Term loans are those taken for capital investment – for purchase of machinery, irrigation, and other such expenses. These loans can be repaid over a period of three-seven years. They are given at (compounded) rates of interest that could be double of what crop loans attract.

Dhananjay Kulkarni, general secretary of the Bank of Maharashtra Employees Union, Aurangabad, is with us and has studied the Osmanabad District Central Cooperative Bank’s letters and notices. “What the ODCC [and other banks] have done,” he says, “is to collapse or club together the crop and term loans of these villagers and convert them into new term loans. Under the title of re-phasement. The ODCC, like other banks, struck an interest rate of 14% on these. However, an additional 2%-4% interest was added on at the level of the coop societies through whom the loans were delivered. Finally, the borrower pays 18% [compounded] interest.”

Shivajiraosaheb Patil from Khed village had borrowed Rs 1.78 lakh in 2004 to pay for an electric motor and installation of a pipeline. He paid back Rs 60,000 in the early years. But this was then clubbed with his crop loan and “re-phased”, in the jargon of the bank, more than once. And “now they tell me I owe over Rs. 13 lakhs”, he says angrily. Suddenly, dozens of farmers are on their feet, speaking at the same time. They’ve all brought along the notices the Osmanabad District Central Cooperative Bank has sent them.

A farmer in Nagur holds up an extract of his loan account from the credit cooperative society; further interest of 2-4 per cent gets added at the level of the societies.

A farmer in Nagur holds up an extract of his loan account from the credit cooperative society; further interest of 2-4 per cent gets added at the level of the societies.

“We accept we owe the bank money,” says Babasaheb Vithalrao Jadhav, a farmer of many decades in Nagur. “And indeed we must pay. But we are unable to right now. Because of good rains this year [after many bad seasons], farmers here have had a decent kharif crop and expect a good rabi crop too. So we could pay in instalments from next year. Paying this year would kill us. ‘Re-phasement’ was a fraud that violates even bank rules. It has doubled, even quadrupled our loans. The government is giving waivers to corporations and the super-rich but cracking down on distressed farmers.”

Many of these loans and their “re-phasing” were also badly timed. They seem to chart the course of the agrarian crisis in Maharashtra, starting around 1998, making a huge leap in 2003-’04 and exploding after 2011. “For four years,” says Shivajirao, “I had 300-400 tons of excess sugarcane crop I was unable to sell.The factories were flooded with cane and declined to lift it. I went bankrupt.Now I’m faced with this demand. I have sold 15 acres of our family’s [un-irrigated] land. But I still can’t handle the burden.”

Most of the rabi crop was sown in these villages before November 8. But transactions thereafter have taken a hit. Kharif crop prices have tumbled with traders “offering us the right amount only if we accept old notes”, farmers say.

Back at the bank, the atmosphere is now much more sober, even sombre, as we discuss the possible consequences of the ODCC acting on its letter.

Executive director Ghonse Patil himself faces a notice for un-refunded advances from a cooperative bank in another district. He and some of his senior officers only now seem to grasp that things can go very wrong from here. What if there was a spurt in farm suicides? What if those are blamed on the bank and its letter? But, says Ghonse Patil, as we part, “We have no other way out but to go for this recovery abhiyan.”
 

Translated excerpts from the ODCC’sletter in Marathi to nearly 20,000 farmers in Osmanabad district

All the above images were taken by P. Sainath.

This article was originally published in The People’s Archive of Rural India on Dec. 9, 2016.

“Greetings.
You must be aware of the economic situation of the Osmanabad District Bank. Since the bank is in financial difficulties, the bank depositors have their full focus on the bank. Due to the increase in overdue unpaid loans there is the fear of loss of liquidity for the bank which is now caught in this quagmire. At least at this time, the only option the bank has to improve its situation is to recover the overdue loans. Naturally, due to the pending loans with you, the bank is unable to pay its depositors the amounts they want to withdraw whenever they want to withdraw. As a result, the depositors are very disappointed with the bank operations.

Similarly, many depositors, when they are faced with the prospect of being unable to withdraw their own money from their accounts are sending us statements that if they cannot withdraw their money, they will be forced to commit suicide and you should be aware that if any depositors commit suicide for such reasons, you will be held responsible and you should understand this.

…Because of your overdue loan, the bank is facing a cash crunch and the bank cannot conduct its operations effectively. The bank’s management committee, senior officers and employee association have decided to use Gandhigiri to try and recover the loans.For this, the bank has decided to do one of the following: 1) Put up a tent opposite your house to protest, 2) Make use of a band, 3) Ring bells.

Due to these actions, your standing and image in society islikely to be in danger. Therefore, to avoid such a situation, you should immediately repay your overdue loans with interest in the concerned bank within 30 days and take a receipt for such payment else, the recovery team will take action as explained above.

We are deliberately writing this to you so that you are aware of the situation.

We are in no doubt that you will repay your loan and avoid any unpleasant events from happening.

Expecting your cooperation,
Details ofOverdue Loans:
Type of loan, Principal: 136300 Interest:348930 . Total : 485230
[loan details for each farmer follow in the originalletter]
Yours faithfully,
Sd-
Vijay S. Ghonse
Executive Director”

This article was first published on Scroll.in

The post In Marathwada, a bank’s humiliating ‘Gandhigiri’ tactics tighten the squeeze on desperate farmers appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
बीजेपी शासित मध्यप्रदेश में किसान काली दिवाली मानाने पर मजबूर https://sabrangindia.in/baijaepai-saasaita-madhayaparadaesa-maen-kaisaana-kaalai-daivaalai-maanaanae-para/ Fri, 28 Oct 2016 10:37:46 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2016/10/28/baijaepai-saasaita-madhayaparadaesa-maen-kaisaana-kaalai-daivaalai-maanaanae-para/ खंडवा। मध्यप्रदेश के खंडवा में किसान इस बार काली दीपावली मनाकर प्रदेश और केंद्र सरकार के खिलाफ हल्ला बोलने की तैयारी में हैं। प्याज की अच्छी फसल होने के बावजूद किसानों को फसल का उचित मूल्य नहीं मिलने से वो आर्थिक संकट झेल रहे हैं। किसान खेतों में खड़ी फसल पशुओं को खिलाने को मजबूर हैं। […]

The post बीजेपी शासित मध्यप्रदेश में किसान काली दिवाली मानाने पर मजबूर appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
खंडवा। मध्यप्रदेश के खंडवा में किसान इस बार काली दीपावली मनाकर प्रदेश और केंद्र सरकार के खिलाफ हल्ला बोलने की तैयारी में हैं। प्याज की अच्छी फसल होने के बावजूद किसानों को फसल का उचित मूल्य नहीं मिलने से वो आर्थिक संकट झेल रहे हैं। किसान खेतों में खड़ी फसल पशुओं को खिलाने को मजबूर हैं। कुछ किसानों ने खेतों में रोटर-कल्टीवेटर और हल चलाकर प्याज की फसल नष्ट की।

कलि दिवाली
 
किसानों का कहना है कि प्रति एकड़ में प्याज की फसल लगाने में 25 हजार रुपए तक खर्च आया था। जबकि मंडी में दो रुपए किलो में भी व्यापारी प्याज नहीं खरीद रहे हैं। ऐसे में भाड़ा लगाकर मंडी तक जाने की बजाए खेतों में ही फसल को नष्ट किया जा रहा है। अहमदपुर खैगांव में करीब 50 प्रतिशत किसानों ने प्याज की फसल लगाई थी। मगर अब किसानों को अतिरिक्त खर्च उठाकर फसल नष्ट करानी पड़ रही हैं। 
 
ये सारा संकट किसान उस मध्यप्रदेश में झेल रहे है जहां की शिवराज सरकार किसान हितैषी होने का दावा करती है। शासन के नीतियों से आर्थिक बोझ में दबे किसान नम आंखो से बताते है कि इस दिवाली पटाखे तो बहुत दूर की बात है वो दीपावली की मिठाई भी बच्चों को नहीं दिला पाएंगे।
 
भारतीय किसान संघ ने आर्थिक संकट से जूझ रहे किसानों की आवाज सरकार तक पहुंचाने के लिए दीपावली नहीं मनाते हुए विरोध प्रदर्शन का आव्हान किया है। किसानों ने शीघ्र ही सरकार से बीमा राशि देकर राहत उपलब्ध करवाने की मांग की है। 

Courtesy: National Dastak
 

The post बीजेपी शासित मध्यप्रदेश में किसान काली दिवाली मानाने पर मजबूर appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>