Kisan Mukti March | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Wed, 05 Dec 2018 09:01:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Kisan Mukti March | SabrangIndia 32 32 In solidarity with Kisan Mukti March: JNUSU https://sabrangindia.in/solidarity-kisan-mukti-march-jnusu/ Wed, 05 Dec 2018 09:01:19 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/12/05/solidarity-kisan-mukti-march-jnusu/ The Farmers’ Freedom from Indebtedness Bill, 2018 and the Farmers’ Right to Guaranteed Remunerative Minimum Support Prices for Agricultural Commodities Bill, 2018 have already been placed in the Parliament. The parliamentary session should ensure the passage of these bills. The focus needs to put on the issues of women farmers, Adivasi and Dalit farmers in […]

The post In solidarity with Kisan Mukti March: JNUSU appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
The Farmers’ Freedom from Indebtedness Bill, 2018 and the Farmers’ Right to Guaranteed Remunerative Minimum Support Prices for Agricultural Commodities Bill, 2018 have already been placed in the Parliament. The parliamentary session should ensure the passage of these bills. The focus needs to put on the issues of women farmers, Adivasi and Dalit farmers in the country, JNUSU said in a statement.

 
Kisan Mukti March

New Delhi: The Jawaharlal Nehru University Students’ Union (JNUSU) expressed their solidarity with the Kisan Mukti March, November 29-30, Delhi.
 
In a press note, they stated that “Over 300,000 farmer suicides in the past twenty years and increased migrations driven by the collapse of livelihoods are reflective of the deep crises of declining productivity, ascending poverty and increased dispossession that plagues the rural economy.”
 
They wrote that the Swaminathan Commission had identified the issues affecting farmers in the country including issues of institutional credit, unfinished agenda of land reforms and water crisis. Over a decade has passed and the recommendations of the Swaminathan Commission are yet to be implemented. Successive central and state governments have failed to address the issues concerning farmers in the country. Consistent anti-farmer policies are reflected in the collapse of the village society and agrarian economy. The current government also cannot shy away from its responsibilities towards those engaged in one of the largest sectors in terms of employment in the country.
 
The All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee (AIKSCC), representing over 200 organisations, has given a call for the Kisan Mukti March to the Parliament demanding a special session of the Parliament on farmer’s issues in the country. This demand for the special parliament session has arisen after continuous protests, petitions, demands from distressed farmers, labourers, several other sections of the population that derive their livelihood from agriculture and related activities. The march will provide a broad platform for the peasants, working class as well as the middle classes to come together and demand the rights of the agricultural workers, farmers, peasants affected by the policies of successive neoliberal governments, JNUSU said.
 
“The Farmers’ Freedom from Indebtedness Bill, 2018 and the Farmers’ Right to Guaranteed Remunerative Minimum Support Prices for Agricultural Commodities Bill, 2018 have already been placed in the Parliament and seeking approval. The parliamentary session should ensure the passage of these bills. The focus needs to put on the issues of women farmers, Adivasi and Dalit farmers in the country,” they said.
 
“The JNUSU gives its complete solidarity to the Kisan Mukti March and vouches to participate in all the struggles seeking redressal of farmers’ concerns in the country,” they stated.
 

The post In solidarity with Kisan Mukti March: JNUSU appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
Kisan Mukti March: Farmers Pledge to Oust ‘Kisan Virodhi’ Modi Government https://sabrangindia.in/kisan-mukti-march-farmers-pledge-oust-kisan-virodhi-modi-government/ Sat, 01 Dec 2018 05:45:30 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/12/01/kisan-mukti-march-farmers-pledge-oust-kisan-virodhi-modi-government/ Setting the tone for the movement ahead, a draft with farmer’s demands has been issued in public interest to mobilise people against the anti-farmer NDA regime.   Congregating in Delhi, thousands of farmers and tribals from 26 states of India, marched from Ramlila Maidan to Parliament Street to make their voices heard at the gates […]

The post Kisan Mukti March: Farmers Pledge to Oust ‘Kisan Virodhi’ Modi Government appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
Setting the tone for the movement ahead, a draft with farmer’s demands has been issued in public interest to mobilise people against the anti-farmer NDA regime.

Kisan mukti march 

Congregating in Delhi, thousands of farmers and tribals from 26 states of India, marched from Ramlila Maidan to Parliament Street to make their voices heard at the gates of India’s Parliament. Holding red, yellow and green flags, singing songs and shouting slogans, the historic farmers’ march pledged to intensify their struggle against the ‘kisan virodhi’ policies of the Narendra Modi government that had added to their distress, and oust it in the next general elections.

farmers%20march%201.jpg

The farmers, united under the umbrella of the All Indian Kisan Coordination Committee, are demanding that Parliament must convene a  21-day special session to discuss the ongoing agrarian crisis.
If the Modi government can conduct a midnight session in the House to pass the GST (good and services tax) Bill then why are the farmer’s issues not on its agenda? the farmers asked.  They are also demanding Parliament must pass the two Bills prepared by a Kisan Parliament last year to ensure liberation from debt and assured remunerative prices. Two Bills have been introduced as private member bills in Parliament by K.K. Raghesh, a CPI(M) MP and Joint Secretary of AIKS in Rajya Sabha, and by Raju Shetti, MP from Maharashtra in the Lok Sabha and leader of the Swabhiman Shetkari Sangathana.

Addressing the farmers, Raju Shetti said, “Aaj Kisaan yahan pe nange aaye hai, aur asliyat ye hai ki kisaanon ne iss sarkaar ko nanga kardiya hai. Ye hakikat leke hum yahan aaye hai, Narendra Modi ko chetawani dene.” He added, “Desh ki azaadi ke baad pehli baar kisan iss tarah ek manch pe aaye hai. Agle saal lal quile se bhashan kaun dega ye ab kisan tai karenge.” (The farmers of the nation walked naked today, but the truth is that the farmers have exposed the Narendra Modi government, we are here to warn him and his regime., This is the first time in independent India’s history that farmers have come together like this, it is up to them to decide who will give the speech next year from the Red Fort.

farmers%20march%202.jpg

Riding on the wave of farmer angst against the Modi government, Congress President Rahul Gandhi, Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal and National Conference leader Farooq Abdullah took on Modi for his ‘dictatorial tactics’, assuring them that their parties would make the farmers’ agenda an electoral during the Lok Sabha poll next year.

Speaking  with Newsclick, Hannan Mollah, General Secretary of the All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS), said, “Kisan akela nahi, aaj hum sab kisan ke saath khade hai, yahi humein 2019 ke chunaav main BJP ko dikhana hai, unke jhoothe vaadon ka natija unke saamne lana hai.” (The farmers of this nation are not alone, the entire nation is standing by them today, the same approach needs to be translated in the 2019 elections to show BJP the consequences of their false promises.”

While seeking votes, the BJP government had promised the farmers complete loan waiver, 1.5 times cost over the cost of production of the farm produce, fair price of commodities and doubling for farmer incomes.

Highlighting the inadequacy and false promises made by the BJP government, Sitaram Yechury, General Secretary of the CPI (M), said “Agricultural growth was already slow in other governments. However, in the last five years, agricultural growth has seen a decline like no other. It has come down from 5.2 % to 2.5%. Not just this, the BJP government instead functioned to protect the interests of big corporates by doling them benefits, big chunks of land in the name of industrial growth and development projects.”

Shedding light on the plight of the displaced, Pratibha Shinde of the Lok Sangharsh Morcha said, “They (the BJP) have ensured that the land of the farmers and the tribals gets taken over by big corporates, the slogan of this government has been, Kisaan ko vayda, companies ko fayda ( make promises to the farmers, benefit the corporates.”

farmers%20sitting%20.jpg

Ahead of the 2019 polls, while the BJP and RSS are convening Dharma Sabhas and polarising voters in Kashi and Ayodhya, farmers and the common people of the country are convening their own Parliament to set the agenda for the future.

The march in Delhi today was modelled on the lines of the Kisan Long March in Nashik earlier this year, With the upcoming worker’s strike on the January 8-9 and the demand draft of the farmer’s movement, the fight of the common people of the country against Modi’s government is only set to intensify.

Courtesy: Newsclick.in
 

The post Kisan Mukti March: Farmers Pledge to Oust ‘Kisan Virodhi’ Modi Government appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
In Images: Farmers Come Knocking On the Doors of Power https://sabrangindia.in/images-farmers-come-knocking-doors-power-0/ Fri, 30 Nov 2018 11:11:39 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/11/30/images-farmers-come-knocking-doors-power-0/ Since yesterday, thousands of Indian farmers have marched to Delhi with their demands. While they had originally intended to march to Parliament, the Delhi police has managed to restrict them to Jantar Mantar, where leaders of the Opposition, including the likes of Rahul Gandhi, Sharad Pawar, and Sitaram Yechury, are addressing them.    India’s farmers […]

The post In Images: Farmers Come Knocking On the Doors of Power appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
Since yesterday, thousands of Indian farmers have marched to Delhi with their demands. While they had originally intended to march to Parliament, the Delhi police has managed to restrict them to Jantar Mantar, where leaders of the Opposition, including the likes of Rahul Gandhi, Sharad Pawar, and Sitaram Yechury, are addressing them. 

 

India’s farmers are in distress. Over three lakh farmers have committed suicide in the twenty-year period between 1995 and 2015. In 2015, the government stopped publishing farmer suicide data. But even a simple trip out of any Indian city, into the countryside, a simple walk through countless Indian villages, is enough to know that our farmers do not enjoy the same privileges, the same quality of life as we in the city do. And yet, there is unprecedented disinterest and apathy about the plight of those who grow our food. The farmer is all but absent from our consciousness – from mass cinema, TV, and news, to government policies. Successive governments have either looked away while India’s farm crisis grew manifold or actively contributed to it. For instance, does anyone even know who Narendra Modi’s agriculture minister is? So now, make their voice heard, the farmers have marched into Delhi. Under the banner of the All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee (AIKSCC), thousands of farmers from all corners of India have arrived in the capital to knock at the doors of the Parliament of India. They have a simple demand – save India’s farmers by passing laws that guarantee a minimum support price (MSP) for their produce, and grant them a comprehensive farm loan waiver. Here are the marchers in images taken by eminent journalists and activists.

The post In Images: Farmers Come Knocking On the Doors of Power appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
Why Thousands Of Farmers Marched To Delhi, Kolkata And Mumbai: Answers And Anger In India’s Fastest-Growing Farm Economy https://sabrangindia.in/why-thousands-farmers-marched-delhi-kolkata-and-mumbai-answers-and-anger-indias-fastest/ Fri, 30 Nov 2018 06:19:42 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/11/30/why-thousands-farmers-marched-delhi-kolkata-and-mumbai-answers-and-anger-indias-fastest/ Budha (Mandsaur, Madhya Pradesh): Some 300 km north-west of capital Bhopal, in the heart of India, amidst dense neem trees, is a courtyard that could determine the electoral fate of this state–and the events that unfolded here explains why farmers marched to Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata in the last week of November 2018. A farmer […]

The post Why Thousands Of Farmers Marched To Delhi, Kolkata And Mumbai: Answers And Anger In India’s Fastest-Growing Farm Economy appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
Budha (Mandsaur, Madhya Pradesh): Some 300 km north-west of capital Bhopal, in the heart of India, amidst dense neem trees, is a courtyard that could determine the electoral fate of this state–and the events that unfolded here explains why farmers marched to Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata in the last week of November 2018.

MP Farmers
A farmer waits for his turn to sell his produce at Mandsaur agriculture produce market in MP

The courtyard here in Budha village was the epicentre of the 2017 farmers’ protests across Madhya Pradesh (MP) –a state that depends on agriculture for 30% of its income and reported 10.9% annual growth in its agricultural sector for eight years to 2015–India’s fastest.

The protest spiralled out from Budha and turned violent after six farmers were killed as police fired  on them at Mandsaur. It has been a rallying point for the farmers’ movement in MP ever since. These farmers were demanding higher minimum support prices (MSP)–the subsidies the government pays them to offset low market prices–and loan waivers, demands that are now common nationwide.

At the core of the farm protests sweeping MP lies a deeper crisis– a fractured farm economy, where 46% of households are indebted. As many as 1,321 farmers committed suicide in MP in 2016, the highest since 2013, according to the government data presented in Lok Sabha on March 20, 2018. While farm suicides dropped by 10% elsewhere in the country in two years to 2016, MP saw a 21% jump.

The story of MP’s farmers is the story of India’s farmers in an era of record harvests. India grew more foodgrain in 2017 than ever before, and the government’s agriculture budget rose 111% over four years to 2017-18, as IndiaSpend reported in January 2018. Yet prices crashed, unpaid agricultural loans grew 20% over the year to 2017, and 600 million Indians who depend on farming struggled to get by.

India was swept by about a dozen major farm protests in 2018, with thousands of farmers travelling to Delhi, Kolkata and Mumbai in the last week of November 2018 alone.

On November 29, 2018, more than 100,000 farmers from many states and more than 200 farm organisations streamed in to Delhi. They gathered at the Ramlila maidan, site for protests and celebrations over decades, demanding a special parliamentary session and the passage of two private members’ bills–also known as Kisan Mukti bills (farmer freedom bills). These propose that MSP be made a legal requirement, the government buy all harvested crops and a debt relief commission be established to hold off debt recovery for up to three years in distressed areas and reschedule and waive certain loans.

The same day, more than 1,000 km east in Kolkata, farmers from across the state of West Bengal gathered to demand loan waivers and the establishment of industries on farm land taken over by the government.

Underlying these protests are data that reveal the decline in India’s agriculture economy: The number of farmers dipped by over 8.6 million over 10 years to 2011, according to Census 2011, and the number of farm labourers increased by more than 37 million. The number of small and marginal farmers–with farms smaller than 5 acres or the size of four football fields–rose by 27 million over 15 years to 2015-16 to reach 126 million, as per the latest agriculture census.

Nearly 70% of India’s 90 million agricultural households spend more than they earn on average each month, pushing them towards debt, the primary reason for more than half farmer suicides recorded nationwide, IndiaSpend reported on June 27, 2017. Over 10 years to 2016, more than 142,000 farmers committed suicide in India.

“Farmers have been working quietly without ever complaining all these years, but how long can we wait for  governments to turn their attention to us?” Hariom Patidar (39), one of the farmers gathered in the courtyard in Budha on November 13, 2018, told IndiaSpend. “So we are demanding it now”.

The courtyard where half a dozen farmers had gathered has seen more than a dozen gatherings of hundreds of farmers over October and November 2018. The agenda of the meetings remained the same: Urging farmers in MP and across India to choose governments sensitive to farmers in both the state elections and in the 2019 general elections.

Unrest over low remunerative prices and uncertain claim settlements under a national crop insurance scheme could hurt the popularity of BJP–currently the ruling party–in the upcoming 2019 general elections, said farmers gathered on the courtyard in Budha.

Food and trade analyst Devinder Sharma said that successive governments have been trying to push farmers out of agriculture. “For them, the best way (to do this) is to make agriculture economically unviable,” he said.

In Madhya Pradesh, agriculture gets only 6.7% of the state’s budget. Of the state’s own revenues, 87% goes towards payment of salaries, pensions and dealing with interest obligations, said Sharma. Other states also spend a large proportion of their revenues on salaries, pensions and interests payments — Chhattisgarh (92%), Punjab (88%) and Rajasthan (115%), for example, he pointed out.

All of these states are heavily dependent of farm economy but where is the investment for farmers? asked Sharma.

Small farmers have been the worst-hit by the crop price crash. They have no safety nets like institutional credit and savings to protect them against such shocks. We followed one such farmer from his farm to the mandi to understand why market forces are loaded against small cultivators.

Why Girdhari Lal’s onion harvest sold at just Rs 1.20 a kilo
A resident of Dalawada village in Mandsaur, Girdhari Lal (55) is a marginal farmer — a category of cultivators who own no more than 2.5 acres of land, the size of two football fields combined. On November 13, 2018, he stood loading 5 quintals of onions, reaped the day before, onto a shared truck to take it to the Mandsaur agriculture produce market, 40 km away. This is one of the biggest agriculture markets for onions in the country.

Lal spent the entire night waiting for market officials to arrive and fix the price for his onions. Short of sleep, with just a samosa and cup of tea to keep him going for over eight hours, he sat with his produce scattered around him on an open ground in the market.

It was almost noon when an official of the market, surrounded by a bunch of traders, walked in. He inspected every onion mound, mentioned a basic bidding rate and soon as he heard a bigger number from the traders, signed the official slip to sell the pile.


Girdhari Lal (55), a marginal farmer, sold his onions for Rs 1.20 per kg, after spending Rs 6 per kg to grow and harvest them.

The official then walked up to Lal’s produce. “120… 120…120,” the bidding began. And stopped, no one had come up with a higher rate. “Rate per quintal: [Rs] 120”: read the pink slip handed to Lal.

Lal got Rs 600 for a harvest that took four months of work, Rs 1.20 per kilo. Since transportation had cost Rs 60 a quintal, all that he took home from the market that day was Rs 300, or 60 paise a kg. He had hoped for at least Rs 15 a kg, said Lal.

“It does not even cover what I owe the labourers, let alone my family expenses,” he said, his voice calm despite the disappointment. “This is our [farmer’s] fate… we will die struggling to barely manage a meal for our family.”

The issue of fair remunerative prices is agitating farmers across India.

If the MSP has been announced, why are we forced to sell our crops below that? Is it not what it means… a ‘minimum price’ for a crop?” said Hariom. To explain their despair with the current agriculture market, the farmers did the calculations for IndiaSpend on a sheet of paper.
MP’s farmers have suffered losses in most major kharif crops in 2018. The worst-hit were soybean and black gram — where losses were to the extent of 30%. The state contributes 31% and 25% respectively of the national output of these crops.

Mung bean and sesame fetched some profit but at margins that are “not enough”, according to the farmers. Also these profits were calculated on a ‘maximum realised price’ which they do not get very often, they said.

The sesame crop takes 90-100 days to mature, so if one hectare of crop fetches a profit of Rs 9,000, it gets an entire farmer family Rs 90/day. This is even less than what a farm labourer earns, pointed out Dileep Patidar (43), a farmer from Budha.

Despite a 9.4% growth in the state’s agriculture GDP over 15 years to 2014-15– far better than the national average of 3.3% between 2000-01 and 2012-13 — the average monthly income of an agricultural household in MP is Rs 6,210, which lags behind the national average of Rs 6,426 (July 2012-June 2013), Mint reported in June 2017.

Farmers should at least fetch Rs 4,500-5,000 for soybean, more than Rs 3,300 for garlic and Rs 1,500-1,800 for onions, if they want to make any profit, but this seems impossible, Dileep said.


Onions pile up in MP’s Mandsaur agriculture market. They sold for a 1/5th of what it cost to grow them.

Bhavantar Yojna: Why farmers are unhappy with the govt price scheme
After the June 2017  Mandsaur protest, the BJP government in the state adopted a different approach towards price support for farmers. It launched the Mukhya Mantri Bhavantar Bhugtan Yojna (chief minister’s price difference payment scheme) commonly known as the Bhavantar Yojna in October 2017. The scheme, pitched by the BJP as a game-changer, pays farmers the difference between the market price and the MSP if the market is depressed.

“Bhavantar Bhugtan Yojna is proving to be a boon for the farmers of MP, getting them fair prices,” chief minister Shivraj Singh Chauhan said at a public rally in January 2018.

“Boon? It is a curse for farmers,” retorted Bharat Patidar (35), a farmer in Budha. “We were happy to hear about the yojna but we eventually realised it has many flaws.”   

In the 2018 kharif (monsoon crop) season, Bharat had sown urad or black gram pulse on a larger acreage in his fields expecting good returns. But his name was excluded from the list of those entitled to sell their crop under the scheme because of an alleged mix-up in the revenue department’s registration process.    

“The revenue department official without even coming on my farm to survey, fraudulently registered my crop as soybean on papers instead of urad,” Bharat said.  “So my produce did not match the revenue department’s papers.”

The farmer, distressed by the thought of losing thousands of rupees, tried to explain his plight to the officials. “Nobody listened, never heard back from them,” he said. “I had to sell my produce at a very low rate in the market. It was a huge loss for me, I had taken a big loan.”
Farmers pointed out another problem with the Bhavantar Yojna — it takes into account the average produce per hectare decided by the revenue department after a survey. So, if a farmer grows 12 quintal in a hectare and the revenue department’s average yield is 7 quintal per hectare, he will be eligible only for benefits in line with the government average.  

With 8 hectares of land, Bharat is a medium-scale farmer, among the only 4% in this category in the state where small and marginal holdings dominate (80%), according to a 2016 report by the central agriculture ministry. Small and marginal farmers anyway find it hard to benefit from the scheme.

“The government usually flags off the Bhavantar Yojna a month into the harvest season,” said Hariom. “This one-month gap excludes most small and marginal farmers from the scheme because most of them sell their produce in this period — they need instant cash to repay their debts and prepare for the next crop.”

The scheme is applicable for just two months during the crop marketing season. This means that most of the season’s produce lands up in the market during this two-month window sending prices crashing, said Kedar Sirohi, president of Kisan Congress, a farmers’ collective, MP.  

If the government were to allow this scheme to continue throughout the year farmers could store their produce and sell it when the market is strong, suggested Sirohi. “This will also reduce the burden on the taxpayer whose money is used for funding the scheme,” he said.


A group of farmers gathered in a courtyard in Budha village in Mandsaur district of MP. The courtyard was the epicenter of farm protests in 2017.

Also, the government does not pay for the entire difference between the MSP and the realised price.

“Let’s take an example of the garlic crop which is coming into the markets these days,” Dileep said. “It is selling at Rs 200 per quintal whereas the declared MSP is Rs 3,200. Going by the name of the scheme the government should pay the farmer the remaining Rs 3000 but then the government has capped the payable sum at Rs 800 per quintal”.

The “cap” Dileep referred is mentioned in the fine-print of the scheme — the government will only pay the difference between the average price, not actual market price the farmer gets, and the MSP. In the case of garlic, the government took the average market price as Rs 2,400. Thus, even after availing the scheme and getting Rs 800 from the government, a farmer who sold his garlic crop at Rs 200 in the market, will still lose about Rs 2,200 on every quintal.  

While adding the average market price clause, the government did not take into account the likelihood of traders colluding to keep prices down. A few months after the launch of the scheme, traders allegedly hammered down the average price of the crops like soybean and black gram pulse by buying at rates lower those in the market, Scroll.in reported in June 2018.

“The fate of the farmers has not changed much; we are selling milk at Rs 18-22 per litre while it used to sell at Rs 30-35/litre a few years back and other produce like soybean at a loss of 20-30%,” Dileep said.


Deelip Patidar, a farmer who took part in the 2017’s farmers’ protest in Mandsaur.

Why farmers are unhappy with crop insurance
Bharat Patidar is insured under the Pradhan Mantri  Fasal Beema Yojna (PMFBY) or Prime Minister Crop Insurance Scheme since it was launched in 2016, but he has not benefitted from it even once so far, he said.

During the last kharif crop, Rs 11,000 were deducted from Bharat’s account for the insurance. So when the production was low due to lack of rainfall, he was hoping to get the claim under the insurance.

“To my surprise, a farm adjacent to mine, but falling under a neighbouring village Limbawas, received the claim but I did not,” Bharat said. “When I asked around in the farmer’s network, I realised that the claims were only settled in villages with small number of farmers and all the large villages were excluded. What kind of logic is this?”

In the villages which received claims this kharif season, compensations were different even in neighbouring villages. Rinchha village in Mandsaur received a compensation of Rs 7,000 per hectare but Barujana next door got only Rs 1,500 per hectare, Dileep told IndiaSpend.
MP has the the third largest number of farmers insured under PMFBY and the Restructured Weather Based Crop Insurance Scheme (RWBCIS) combined during kharif 2017– 3.5 million. Maharashtra with 8.7 million farmers and Rajasthan with 5.3 million farmers held the first and second positions, according to the scheme’s online portal.

However, no more than 46% of insured farmers in MP received their claims, as per data.


Source: Pradhan Mantri Fasal Beema Yojna Portal
Data for Kharif 2017 (PMFBY and RWBCIS Combined Till Oct 1, 2018]

What the farm crisis could mean for BJP’s popularity in MP
About 75% of the more than 50 million voters in MP — 70% of the working population in the state survives on agricultural income — turned up at 65,000 polling stations on November 28, 2018, to choose their next government.

The results will be declared on December 11, 2018 but here are what pre-poll surveys showed: A Times Now surveybefore exit polls were banned till December 7, 2018–suggested that the Shivraj Singh Chouhan government will bag a fourth-term in MP. BJP could win 122 of 230 seats, crossing the halfway-mark, said the poll.

A couple of other exit polls, done earlier this year, predicted a Congress win.  The party will get a 49% vote share and BJP 34%, said the May 2018 joint survey conducted by Lokniti, the Centre for Developing Societies (CSDS) and ABP. A poll by CVoter and ABP in August 2018 predicted a 42% vote share for the Congress and 40% for the BJP. A second poll by Lokniti-CSDS-ABP done more recently in October 2018, however, suggested that BJP (41%) will take a one-point lead over the Congress (40%) in MP.

Whatever the results, it is clear that the farm crisis has impacted the BJP’s popularity in the state and the party’s campaigners admit as much.

“Bhavantar Yojna is a good scheme but the farmers’ have been complaining that process to avail money under this scheme is complicated,” said Nihar Chand, a member of the BJP’s state working committee who has been campaigning in Mandsaur.Farmers also question us about the irregularities in the crop insurance scheme, about the frauds committed by revenue officials in surveys.”

BJP campaigners had gone from village to village trying to convince farmers that their problems would be resolved soon. Farmers appear unconvinced.


A dilapidated building reads a message to farmers of Budha village in Mandsaur district of MP. 

This government talks about Hindu-Muslim issues, the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya, but they never utter a single word about MSP, they do not feel responsible for the farmers’ distress, said Hariom. “I am going to vote for the party which will make farmers’ issues its priority, and the Congress party seems to be doing that in their campaign,” he said.

Bharat warned politicians against underestimating the political strength of farmers. “Today farmers are educated enough to understand that their leaders have wronged them,” he said. “They will sit on dharna, block roads, fast unto death, do whatever they can to to be heard and get what they deserve,” he said.

(Tripathi is a principal correspondent with IndiaSpend.)

Courtesy: India Spend
 

The post Why Thousands Of Farmers Marched To Delhi, Kolkata And Mumbai: Answers And Anger In India’s Fastest-Growing Farm Economy appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
Kisan Mukti March: ‘It’s Time to Take on the Govt and Make our Voices Heard’ https://sabrangindia.in/kisan-mukti-march-its-time-take-govt-and-make-our-voices-heard/ Fri, 30 Nov 2018 05:53:41 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/11/30/kisan-mukti-march-its-time-take-govt-and-make-our-voices-heard/ Setting an agenda against the Modi government ahead of the 2019 elections, lakhs of farmers reach Delhi for march to Parliament on Friday.     Over 85 years in age, Kamdev Prasad from Nalanda entered the Anand Vihar station in Delhi, in anger and disillusionment with the Narendra Modi government but also a resolve–The fight […]

The post Kisan Mukti March: ‘It’s Time to Take on the Govt and Make our Voices Heard’ appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
Setting an agenda against the Modi government ahead of the 2019 elections, lakhs of farmers reach Delhi for march to Parliament on Friday.

 

Kisan mukti march
 
Over 85 years in age, Kamdev Prasad from Nalanda entered the Anand Vihar station in Delhi, in anger and disillusionment with the Narendra Modi government but also a resolve–The fight for the justice for farmers of India is far from over. Speaking to Newsclick, he said, “I have seen way too many people succumb to pressure and commit suicide, but now is the time to take on the government and make our voices heard.”

The very essence of this sentiment is shared by lakhs of other farmers, who, like Prasad, travelled across the length and breadth of the country to make their voices heard. The farmers have reached the national capital and are congregating at four major points of Delhi and are  gearing up to flood Parliament street tomorrow.

The historic march is setting an agenda against the Modi government ahead of the 2019 elections, Under the BJP government, farmers protests have witnessed a significant increase. Starting with the massive struggle for protection of land rights and against unjust land acquisition within a year of the formation of the Modi government, the movements of farmers have burst out repeatedly in several states, mostly on the twin issues of low prices for produce and consequent indebtedness.

Kisan%20Mukti%20March%201%20(1).png
Highlighting the plight of her debt, Sushila Devi, showed Newsclick her wounds from regular scuffles with the moneylenders. She said,“As a wage worker, I get regularly beaten up, they wreck my home and demand that I pay up the dues by hook or by crook.” Sushila has taken a loan worth Rs 50,000 after she failed to receive the desired MSP (minimum support price) for her crops.

Marching with inflamation on her feet, Rakhi Devi, said, “my swollen feet show my struggle. The price of rice, petrol all the commodities have shot up during the Modi government’s rule. There is so much money I have to spend on the produce, the prices of all the commodities have fallen under the Modi sarkaar, I don’t get the MSP for my produce, how will I feed my children? I am struggling to make ends meet.”

Crumbling under increased agrarian distress which has led to over three  lakh farmer suicides and ruination of many more, the farmers through the symbolic march are hoping to break free from the vortex of poverty, debt and political apathy. The cause of the farmers is being led by an umbrella body, All Indian Kisan Coordination Committee, which  includes All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS), Swaraj Abhiyan, Swabhimani Shetkari Sangathana, and is supported by over 208 organisations across the country, including workers, students, artistes.

Speaking to NewsClick, Tapan Sen, the General Secretary of Centre of Indian Trade Unions,  said, The farmer community is deep in crisis. The  only positive thing is the fact that the farmers are gradually realising that commiting suicide is no longer an option, so rather be on the street and fight against the fraudulent Modi government and bring it on its toes to change the whole policy regime.”

In the expression of unity the farmers collectively expressed their resentment towards the BJP government. Rakesh Yadav a farmer from  Fatehpur, Uttar Pradesh said, ‘Hum sab kisan Modiji ke virodh main aaye hain, Modi apne saare vaadon ko lekar viphal rahe hain, ye kisanon ka jan saelab Modi ke khilaaf umad raha hai, ye iss baat ka saboot hai, ki desh ka kisan poori tarah se toot chuka hai.

Modiji ka shasak jungle raaj hai, aur vakt aa gaya hai ise badalne ka.” (The farmers have united against Modiji. This is proof of the fact that the farmer under the current system has completely broken down, his rule of governance is that of a jungle raaj and it is time we change it.)

The Kisan Mukti March is witnessing enormous participation from farmers across the country, whose main demand is that a 21-day special session of Parliament be called to discuss the agrarian crisis. The special session should discuss and pass the two Bills prepared by a Kisan Parliament last year to ensure liberation from debt and assured remunerative prices. Two Bills have been introduced as private member bills in Parliament by K.K. Raghesh, a CPI(M) MP and Joint Secretary of AIKS in Rajya Sabha, and by Raju Shetti, MP from Maharashtra in the Lok Sabha and leader of the Swabhiman Shetkari Sangathana. The farmers have also been demanding the implementation of the recommendations of the MS Swaminathan Commission.

Kisan%20Mukti%20March%202%20(1).jpg 
 

Courtesy: Newsclick.in

The post Kisan Mukti March: ‘It’s Time to Take on the Govt and Make our Voices Heard’ appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
Kisan Mukti March: Farmers’ Protest March in Delhi on 29-30 November 2018 https://sabrangindia.in/kisan-mukti-march-farmers-protest-march-delhi-29-30-november-2018/ Thu, 29 Nov 2018 05:24:50 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/11/29/kisan-mukti-march-farmers-protest-march-delhi-29-30-november-2018/ They are demanding a special Parliament Session to pass laws on debt waiver and higher prices for produce      The real face of India will once again be visible in the capital Delhi on 29-30 November 2018, as thousands of farmers arrive to highlight their distress and demand from the indifferent Modi govt. that […]

The post Kisan Mukti March: Farmers’ Protest March in Delhi on 29-30 November 2018 appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>
They are demanding a special Parliament Session to pass laws on debt waiver and higher prices for produce
farmers march
 
The real face of India will once again be visible in the capital Delhi on 29-30 November 2018, as thousands of farmers arrive to highlight their distress and demand from the indifferent Modi govt. that laws should be passed for complete debt waiver of all farmers and higher prices be ensured for agricultural produce. This huge expression of farmers’ unity and strength stands in marked contrast to recent attempts by RSS and various Hindu fundamentalists to whip up support for a law for building a Ram temple in Ayodhya.

The Kisan Mukti March (Farmers Liberation March) is expected to see participation from all states in the country. It is being organised by the All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee (AIKSCC), a joint front of 208 farmers organisations and civil society groups.
Their main demand is that the a 21-day special session of the Parliament be called to discuss the raging agrarian crisis that has led to over 3 lakh farmers’ suicides and ruination of many more. The special session should discuss and pass the two Bills prepared by a Kisan Parliament last year to ensure liberation from debt and assured remunerative prices. Two Bills have been introduced as private member bills in the Parliament by K.K.Raghesh, CPI(M) MP and Joint Secretary of AIKS in Rajya Sabha and by Raju Shetti, MP from Maharashtra in the Lok Sabha. Raju Shetti had contested as an ally of the BJP in 2014, but he has now quit the NDA and is part of the AIKSCC.

The organisers have invited all political parties to send their representatives to participate in the March and declare their support for the demands. Several Opposition Chief Ministers are also expected to participate, including Kerala’s Pinarayi Vijayan and Delhi’s Arvind Kejriwal.

On 29 November, farmers will congregate at four points (in four directions) of the city and start marching towards the Ramlila Grounds located in central Delhi. A cultural programme “Ek Shaam Kisanon Ke Naam” (One Evening For Farmers) where eminent artists will perform has been planned for the evening. On 30 November, the gathered farmers – estimated at about a lakh – will march to the Parliament.

The past few years, especially the Modi period, have seen a growing tide of farmers’ protests which have been growing in sweep and scale. Starting with the massive struggle for protection of land rights and against unjust land acquisition within a year of the formation of the Modi govt. the movements of farmers burst out repeatedly in several states, mostly on the twin issues of low prices for produce and consequent indebtedness. Last November, a massive three-day Kisan Sansad took place in Delhi where thousands of farmers and families of many of those who had committed suicide took part. The Sansad ‘passed’ the two Bills and urged the Parliament to formally pass them and save the farming community of India from death and destitution. On 9th August this year, a Jail Bharo (Fill the Prisons) agitation was held across the country on the anniversary of the Quit India Movement which saw over 5 lakh peasants and workers taking part.

On 19 September this year, the farmers organisations and concerned citizens wrote an urgent appeal to the President of India urging him to ask the govt. to convene a Parliament Session and pass the two laws. The letter to the President said:
We request your intervention as the President of the Republic of India and the Constitutional head to ensure that a crisis of this scale that renders 70 per cent of Indian citizens vulnerable is addressed by a joint session of the Parliament of this country. In the recent past there was a midnight joint session of the Parliament to discuss the Goods and Services Tax. Surely the precariousness of the lives of millions of citizens merits the undivided attention of Parliament and thereby its commitment to find enduring solutions.

It pointed out the continuing struggles of various sections of working people in the country and the shameful failure of the Modi govt. to address their problems:
We bring to your attention that this demand for a special Parliamentary session emerges after numerous protests, petitions, pleadings by distressed farmers, labourers, forest communities, fisher folk and the foot soldiers of our country’s literacy and health care programmes – Anganwadi, Accredited Social Health Activists and Auxiliary Nurse Midwife workers, have failed to garner the attention of successive governments to the agrarian crisis.

One feature of the ongoing farmers’ struggles has been the increasing convergence with industrial workers’ movement that has been fighting for better wages and other demands. The 5th September Mazdoor-Kisan Sangharsh Rally this year saw lakhs of peasants, agricultural workers and workers marching together on the streets of Delhi.

It is this recent legacy of struggles that is woven together and expressing itself in the powerful Kisan Mukti March in Delhi. Meanwhile, spurred by the plight and fighting spirit of the oppressed farmers, several middle-class urban organisations too have decided to express solidarity with them and will be joining the March.

Courtesy: Newsclick.in

The post Kisan Mukti March: Farmers’ Protest March in Delhi on 29-30 November 2018 appeared first on SabrangIndia.

]]>