Vidarbha | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Fri, 12 Apr 2019 07:54:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png Vidarbha | SabrangIndia 32 32 General Elections 2019: Watchout for Vidharbha https://sabrangindia.in/general-elections-2019-watchout-vidharbha/ Fri, 12 Apr 2019 07:54:46 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2019/04/12/general-elections-2019-watchout-vidharbha/ Maharashtra with 48 parliamentary constituencies is a key state in the General Elections. On April 11, three key constituencies; Gadhchiroli, Yavatmal, Nagpur and Bhandara-Gondia, went to polls. All of them are located in the Vidarbha region that is reeling under intense agrarian distress and also faces challenges like the presence of Naxal groups and a […]

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Maharashtra with 48 parliamentary constituencies is a key state in the General Elections. On April 11, three key constituencies; Gadhchiroli, Yavatmal, Nagpur and Bhandara-Gondia, went to polls. All of them are located in the Vidarbha region that is reeling under intense agrarian distress and also faces challenges like the presence of Naxal groups and a complicated caste quotient that will play a key role in determining the electoral future of the region. Here’s a look at why one needs to keep an eye on who comes to power here.

Maharashtra Election
Image Courtesy: DNA
 
Gahchiroli – Chimur:
This constituency is a heavily forested region and also has a huge tribal population. It is alleged that several Naxal groups are active in the region and often engage in acts of violence. It was constituted in 2008 due to delimitation and the Member of Parliament seat is reserved for a member of a Scheduled Tribe (ST). The current MP Ashok Nete is from the BJP.
 
This is an extremely violence ridden constituency. In fact, an IED blast took place just 150 meters from a polling booth in the Waghezari area in the constituency at about 10:30 AM on the day of polling! No one was reported to be injured. It is alleged that Naxal groups active in the area were behind the attack that was carried out to disrupt the poll process and create panic among people.
 
But this was not the first such incident in the election season. Just a day before the polls, a CRPF jawaan was critically injured when an IED blast took place in the Gatta Ettapalli area. Members of the 191st battalion were patrolling the area when the blast took place.
 
Yavatmal – Washim:
This constituency was once part of the prosperous cotton belt, but today it faces acute agrarian distress. It is one of the worst affected regions when it comes to incidents of farmer suicide. In fact, in April 2018, when 50 year old farmer Shankar Bhaurao Chayare allegedly committed suicide, he left behind a suicide note where he blamed PM Modi for his misery.
 
It has also been in the news for cases of pesticide poisoning. Shockingly, a state government appointed Special Investigation Team (SIT) led by Amravati Divisional Commissioner (Revenue) blamed the dead farmers and farm labourers for their own misfortune!
 
Incidents of communal violence were reported in 2008, 2009 and 2016. However, in a display of communal harmony Muharram sawari and Ganpati idols were installed under the same roof as Hindus and Muslims came together and stood united against hate.  
 
This constituency was constituted in 2008 due to delimitation and the current MP is Bhavana Gawali of the Shiv Sena.
 
Bhandara – Gondia:
The constituency was constituted due to delimitation in 2008 and has seen some political heavyweights vying for the MP spot. While NCP’s Praful Patel helmed it from 2009 to 2014, the last general election saw BJP’s Nana Patole come to power. But Patole resigned suddenly in December 2017 citing inaction on issues of farmer distress.
 
In the by-election that followed NCP’s Madhukar Kukde took the mantle on MP in a huge upset for the BJP. Patole joined the Congress Party in January 2018 and is contesting elections from Nagpur this year where he faces off against BJP heavyweight Nitin Ghadkari.
 
The caste factor cannot be ignored in Bhadara – Gondia that has over 18 lakh voters, 4 lakh of whom belong to the Kunbi community, 3.25 lakhs from the Teli community and about 1 lakh members of the Dhivar community that is traditionally associated with fishing. The constituency also has 2.25 lakh Powars, 3.5 lakh Scheduled Castes (SC) and also approximately 50,000 Muslims. Both the BSP and the Vanchit Bahujan Aghadi (VBA) have fielded candidates. 

 

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Widows of Vidarbha https://sabrangindia.in/widows-vidarbha/ Fri, 06 Jul 2018 06:55:17 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/07/06/widows-vidarbha/ Farmer suicides are the most vicious and unforgiving indictment of the neglect of agriculture by the state and the politics, obsessed with power and the market. But the story of a farmer’s distress does not end with his death; it lives on in the experiences of the widows who struggle in the shadows because they […]

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Farmer suicides are the most vicious and unforgiving indictment of the neglect of agriculture by the state and the politics, obsessed with power and the market. But the story of a farmer’s distress does not end with his death; it lives on in the experiences of the widows who struggle in the shadows because they are invisible to the state, the community, and even their families. Published in January 2018, Kota Neelima’s Widows of Vidarbha: Making of Shadows is the story of 18 such widows of Vidarbha; it is an attempt at making their voices heard. The following extract is from the chapter “Death at the Wishing Well”. It is the story of Anjana Katekar, a widow since December 3, 2011.
 


Image Courtesy: Amazon
 
What is a nation worth, if its citizens seek to escape their lives and commit suicide? The farmers of Vidarbha did not just commit suicide to be free of their circumstances, poverty, and helplessness. They also died silently amid the cacophony of election promises that glorified the farmer. What is a democracy worth when the vote merely exchanged politicians in power and never changed their politics?

The Vidarbha farmers, like their brethren elsewhere in the country, voted in free and fair elections that formed 16 governments at the centre since 1952 and 13 at the state level in Maharashtra since 1960. They were promised irrigation in five year plans by experts; they were pledged water in lengthy budget speeches in hallowed elected houses but were yet to see even a drop delivered. And yet, the same governments and the state knew that rain-fed Vidarbha was involved in cotton cultivation with genetically modified seeds that required regular irrigation. Elected governments, on the lines of colonial exploiters, had overlooked the plight of the Indian farmers and even tried to minimize the crisis. Despite this, in every election the voter diligently carried his/her identity card to the polling booth and chose a candidate from the list who promised, if not a vastly improved future, at least a secure one. The voter created several influential politicians hailing from Vidarbha like Devendra Fadnavis (present chief minister of Maharashtra from the BJP), Nitin Gadkari (present minister for Road Transport and Highways, Shipping and Water Resources, River Development & Ganga Rejuvenation in the central government, from the BJP), Praful Patel (present Member of Parliament, and former minister of Civil Aviation from the Nationalist Congress Party), among many others. The list of the powerful was long, but longer was the list of farmers who had committed suicide every year in Vidarbha.

As Anjana, the widow of Shanker Katekar, said, ‘No one really cares about poor farmers like us.’ Her 46-year-old husband had committed suicide in 2011 because of debt; they had five daughters (of whom one remains unmarried), and an unmarried son. The official documents stated that the ‘burden of debt’, a phrase often used to explain the circumstances of a farmer’s suicide, required enquiry. Why was it that farmers, some of the poorest people of this country, needed to repay loans with interest? One answer could be that if they had taken loans, then they must repay like everyone else. But surely, the deaths of the defaulters said something about this system. How many suicides would it take for the banks, the government, the experts, the economists, and others, to realize that farmers could not repay loans, not even at the so-called low interest rates? Every farmer suicide was a plea seeking to draw attention to the fact that rain-fed agriculture required a different system of crops, finance, markets, and other aspects—aspects that every farmer listed out each time he/she was asked.

The burden of loan also begged another question: why would a farmer commit suicide when millions of people defaulted on death at the wishing well loans in this country? Farmers committed suicide, notwithstanding the various self-serving explanations of politicians and their supporting research, because they believed in fairness. They never questioned why they were subject to the same rules of banking as the affluent class or why were they harassed for repayment or why they were refused loans if they defaulted. Farmers believed that the state was fair. And, when they were unable to repay the loans, they preferred to end their lives rather than live with the burden. It was just as well that they would not discover how farmer suicides were subverted by the state afterwards; the death of an honest farmer had repercussions, even in this nation of hijacked headlines. The state minimized the damage it wreaked by questioning the character of the farmer, imputing some of the suicides in Vidarbha to alcoholism, gambling, depression, domestic quarrels, etc.1 No visit to the state administration is complete without this version of farmer suicides being offered to researchers. In comparison, the state shares little information on harassment by moneylenders, recovery notices by banks, household visits to ask for money by cooperative societies, refusal by kisan kendras2 to lend farm material, threats by lending agencies, etc. If a farmer who faced harassment for loan recovery committed suicide, who would be held complicit in his death? That was primarily why the burden of debt, besides being the truth, was also a simple guilt free description of a farmer’s condition.

In the absence of political accountability through elections, the administration remained complacent and inefficient. Instead of modern irrigation techniques, the administration could get away by sanctioning wells that either had little or no water. It rarely helped the farmer to deepen or repair such wells. Shanker died, according to the police report, a few feet away from one such well in his field in December 2011. The well, a symbol of survival for most farmers in Vidarbha, was the only hope for any yield on his11.5-acre land. It was the harvest season and a low cotton yield meant that he would not be able to repay the loan he had taken that year. The police report of the suicide stated that Shanker had died from poisoning; the bottle of pesticide he had consumed was found at the spot. Spraying pesticide for the cotton crop was critical as it protected the crop from debilitating pests that brought down the yield. The crop in his fi eld had reached the stage where it was sprayed several times, and each spray cost Shanker money he could not afford. These expenses were recorded at the kisan kendra, to be recovered at the time of harvest. Along with irrigation, the high use of pesticide was another requirement for the cotton crop that was not easy to fulfil. The cost of cultivation of the advanced seeds of cotton contradicted the propaganda that it was disease resistant and high yielding.3

Shanker was discovered in the field by his son Umesh. Apart from the bottle of the pesticide, in which there was still some left, there was also a steel plate that he used to consume the poison. Shanker had taken the pesticide on the afternoon of 3 December2011, and was declared dead on arrival at the government hospital death at the wishing well at Amravati. There was a reason that the well had been at the 147centre of Shanker’s dreams for the future. It had materialized after many efforts, according to Anjana. The administration provided support to dig agricultural wells for poor farmers owning dry land and one such well was made in Shanker’s land. It had been 10years in 2015 since the well was made, and it was still dry. Anjana said, ‘The administration has to ensure that a certain number of wells were dug in the village. This was a target they had to meet and they weren’t bothered about the usefulness of the wells,’ she said. ‘The well was sanctioned when there was water at 10 feet, but that became scarce with each passing year. We kept asking the officials to sanction the deepening of the well, but that was not their concern. No one bothered to re-examine the location of the well or relocate it to a new place,’ Anjana said, her lean face angry. ‘It does not matter to anyone that we were losing our crops. How could we have repaid the loans if there was no water in our fields and no yield? We were ready to work on other’s fields as wage labour and repay the loans. We just needed help.’

Ironically, even the compensation that the state had given Anjana had gone into repairing the well. The indifference of the administration was such that the relief provided for the death of the farmer was used by the family to do the state’s work. Anjana explained, ‘We used part of the Rs 30,000 that came to me as relief, to deepen the well.’ The well that was dug to a depth of10 feet by the administration was now 40 feet, and every inch had cost something of Shanker’s life. On the other hand, it would have taken one signature of the administration on an approval letter to do the same.

[…]
Shanker had an outstanding loan from a bank that sent notices for repayment. The latest notice, in December 2013,4 was two years after Shanker’s death, in which the bank stated that the loan of Rs 47,000 taken in May 2011, and amounted to Rs 56,427 and interest. It said that interest was being added to the principle amount and urged him to repay instead of incurring losses. It also stated that he had not honoured the agreement of the loan and the tenure was now over. While Shanker was beyond such threats now, Anjana was not.

‘The bank people told us to repay,’ Anjana said, referring to the letter. ‘But there was nothing to repay them with.’ Anyone could have discerned that just by looking at the way Anjana lived. Did the banks, perhaps, think that there were places to hide over Rs 64,000, the amount pending now, in that sparse, empty house? Anjana had preserved that letter, possibly to remind herself why her husband had killed himself. She had been sheltered from such matters throughout her life, as Shanker had never shared his burdens with her. ‘The yield from our 11.5 acres for cotton had always been low because of lack of irrigation. Then he tried to plant cotton in one half of the land and soybean in another half in 2011, hoping that would help.’ It did not; the yield was low death at the wishing well even for soybean—4 quintals for 5 acres. They had to get one of 149 their daughters, Swati, married in May that year, and Shanker had hoped that a good crop that season would repay the loan. Swati and her husband must have realized why Shanker had killed himself or where the expense for their marriage had come from. But such matters were not to be talked about in families; a daughter’s marriage was always delicately balanced with the husband and his family holding it for ransom.

The gram panchayat had numbered the house that was barely standing, and in a corner of the plaque was the message to educate the girl child. This was unnecessary advice in the Katekar household; Swati was educated up to Class 12, but still worked in the fields. The gram panchayat did not mention in its message what a girl should do with her education. Like the expensive well that did not have water, the government supported expensive education for the poor without providing opportunities for employment. Perhaps, that was why Shanker’s son Umesh had dropped out of school when he reached Class 7. Anjana said he wanted to pursue agriculture and tend the farm with his father. Now, Umesh took care of the field alone, and in 2015, had planted wheat in 5 acres that would serve for household consumption.

[…]
Anjana’s only complaint against her late husband was that he had never shared with her the troubles he faced about the pending loans. He had toiled with a difficult crop on an impossible land but kept all the distress to himself. She felt she could have shared the burden and supported him. But perhaps he could not share his plans with her. Perhaps he had planned to die next to the well, finally losing hope that there would be water in his fields. What if the well had to be deepened again? Who would have to pay for it with their lives? Certainly not the administration, which lived off a salary or even the government, which lived off the votes of the poor farmers.

***

In July 2017, the well was still dry. Earlier in August 2016, despite the good monsoons, the family stated that the well had remained dry and, once again, they got no support from the government to deepen it. A part of the roof of the house had collapsed in the heavy rains, and was yet to be repaired. Umesh had planted soybean, cotton, and pulses in the fi eld, hoping for a good yield. Shanker’s pending loan, though restructured, still remained, haunting Umesh. The bank had called him to discuss repayment. Umesh said, ‘I told the manager that there was no money as there 151 was no crop last year. But he did not listen; he just said the loan must be repaid.’ He had to borrow money for the new crop, and that loan of Rs 85,000 was pending with another lending agency. The aggregate loan amount now stood at Rs 1,49,000.

[…]

The troubles that claimed Shankar Katekar’s life continued for his family, and like him, they too wished there was water in the well.
 
1. Refer to the Introduction for the discussion on the ‘other’ possible reasons generally stated by the government for farmer suicides.
2. Kisan Kendra or krishi Kendra are agricultural input shops that provide farm requirements, sometimes on loan in lieu of produce.
3. Monsanto (www.monsantoglobal.com) is a US-based company that produces seeds for better crops, according to its website. Also see, Vandana Shiva, ‘The Seeds of Suicide: How Monsanto Destroys Farming’, Global Research, 9 March 2016. www.globalresearch.ca/the-seeds-of-suicide-how-monsanto-destroys-farming/5329947, accessed 5 July 2017. In 1993, Monsanto partnered with an Indian seed company MAHYCO to introduce Bt cotton seeds in India and in 1998, a 50-50 joint venture called MAHYCO-Monsanto Biotech (MMB) was formed. Bt cotton seeds were perceived as superior, with claims that they would not require pesticides for high yields, and were adopted mostly by small and marginal farmers. Anil K. Gupta and Vikas Chandak, ‘Agriculture Biotechnology in India: Ethics, Business and Politics’, Int. J. Biotechnology, Vol. 7, Nos. 1/2/3, 2005, pp. 212-27.
4. Notice from the bank in Bhatkuli tehsil, on 8 December 2013.


Widows of Vidarbha: Making of Shadows was published in January 2018 by the Oxford University Press. This extract has been republished here with permission from Oxford University Press.

 

Kota Neelima is a former Senior Research Fellow at SAIS, John Hopkins University, Washington, DC, USA, and writes on farmer suicides, rural women, and electoral reforms in India.

Courtesy: India Cultural Forum

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Allowed to Breathe Poison in Vidarbha https://sabrangindia.in/allowed-breathe-poison-vidarbha/ Sat, 21 Oct 2017 10:30:21 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/10/21/allowed-breathe-poison-vidarbha/ In our previous story concerning pesticide related deaths in Vidarbha, we illustrated how the deaths were preventable and occurred only due to the apathy and callousness of authorities that should have done a better job regulating the quality and sale of pesticides in the state. We also demonstrated how various authorities washed their hands off […]

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In our previous story concerning pesticide related deaths in Vidarbha, we illustrated how the deaths were preventable and occurred only due to the apathy and callousness of authorities that should have done a better job regulating the quality and sale of pesticides in the state. We also demonstrated how various authorities washed their hands off any responsibility and squarely blamed the farmers for their own deaths. In this story we will examine international standards and best practices to understand further the lacunae in our system. We looked into various provisions of the Insecticides Act, 1968 and how these were not being adhered to by small and big players. How dangerous pesticides like Monocrotophos that is sold under the brand name Monocil and that was directly responsible for the deaths of 18 farmers in Yavatmal, are easily available over the counter.

Farmers
 

Acts and legal provisions

Though the Insecticides Act was enacted in 1968 to ensure a mechanism to regulate the import, manufacture, sale, transport, distribution and use of insecticides with a view to preventing risk to humans and animals, several lacunae in the Act made the unregulated flow of pesticides possible in the markets. Some of these loopholes include a lack of clarity on qualification for manufacturers, dealers, stockists and commercial pest control operators, larger representation of experts in the Central Pesticides Board and the Registration Committee, fixing tolerance limits of pesticides as a pre-condition of their registration. Also, since the Act was drafted about 5 decades ago, an elaborate description of pesticides to cover any substance of chemical or biological origin intended for preventing, destroying, repelling, mitigating or controlling any pest, including unwanted species of plants or animals, which may enable regulation of existing pesticides as well as new discoveries, is missing.

A new Pesticides Management Bill was tabled in the parliament in 2008. The said bill claims to cover all aspects of development, regulation and quality monitoring, production, management, packaging, labeling, distribution, handling, application, control, including post registration activities and disposal of all types of pesticides. The Bill proposes stringent punishments to check production and sale of misbranded, sub-standard and spurious pesticides, besides, and most importantly, providing for the disposal of expired, sub-standard and spurious pesticides in an environment friendly and safe manner.

Click here for Full Story

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Reporting from Ground Zero, Yeovatmal: Pesticide Deaths in Kapas (Cotton)Cultivation https://sabrangindia.in/reporting-ground-zero-yeovatmal-pesticide-deaths-kapas-cottoncultivation/ Thu, 12 Oct 2017 04:20:53 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/10/12/reporting-ground-zero-yeovatmal-pesticide-deaths-kapas-cottoncultivation/   Photo of Father (Rajarao Vadkar  )of a farmer (Vijay Rajaram Vadkar) who is admitted patient of spray poisoning admitted  I am in Yavatmal for an assignment and thought of finding the facts about the farmer poisoning in this area. I went to Yavatmal Govt Hospital, Sri Vasantrao Naik hospital in Yavatmal.I met Dr. Elke, medicine department, […]

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Photo of Father (Rajarao Vadkar  )of a farmer (Vijay Rajaram Vadkar) who is admitted patient of spray poisoning admitted 

I am in Yavatmal for an assignment and thought of finding the facts about the farmer poisoning in this area. I went to Yavatmal Govt Hospital, Sri Vasantrao Naik hospital in Yavatmal.I met Dr. Elke, medicine department, he is in-charge of briefing about the hospital/patient data. 
The dean had asked me to meet him.
 
Our report from Yeovatmal:
Dr. Elke said till yesterday (Wednesday October 11,2017) 445 patients have been admitted for poisoning due to chemical spaying in the farm. The first patient of poisoning came in on July 6
and to date 445 persons are admitted in this hospital, all victims of pesticide poisoning.
 
Eleven have so far died out of the 445 seriously ill who had been admitted. The success rate of saving lives is 98%. ( Last year though lesser number of patients came and 6 died, the survival was 96%, this year there has been a marginal improvement in saving lives)

Dr Elke said that this year it has rained better than the last year. (it is drought affected area, the rainfall was less than the requirement but more than last year).The plants grow taller 5-7 feet if rainfall is adequate and this year due to rainfall plants grew tall. (mostly cotton Kapas plants, but same chemicals are also sprayed on Tuar daal and Soyabean too). The height of plants matter: when it is at the same or the higher level than the height of the person spraying it, the particles/fumes come back to the person, and they get soaked in the chemical, being affected and vulnerable totally. 

    
 
Poisonous Pesticide

The organic Phosphorus Compound in the chemical is what caused poisoning. Most commonly Monocil (popular pesticide brand name) is used, it contains Monocrotophos, exposure (inhalation) of monocrotophos causes poisoning. It affects many vital organs in the body, and the deaths are caused due to a respiratory muscle paralysis. 
 
Most of the farmers know how lethal this compound is, therefore, they hire poor labourers for spraying, the labourers take up this risky spraying job in seasons because they paid more than normal wages. Hence, most of the patients admitted in this hospital are the labourers, they are from the same or nearby villages. 
 
There are many more poisoning cases and patients are being treated in various government and private hospitals. Total numbers can be availed from the collector or the civil surgeon. 
 
Every year new brands of pesticides are entering the market, some farmers who had used similar pesticides previously never had this experience. There is no awareness or standard of toxicity in similar chemicals. 
 
This is happening all over Vidarbha region, Dr. Elke could give data only about Yavatmal hospital. He said there is a separate data of suicides by drinking poison with poison, that is very common in Vidarbha and they regularly get such cases. 
 
I also met a relative of two patients who are now out of danger. 
 
Rajarao Wadkar has his son Vijay Rajaram Vadkar and a relative Haribhau Manik Kundekar admitted in ward no 19 of the hospital. They were lucky to reach hospital in time (on 30th sept and 1st oct), they are from Bhari Village only 9 kilometre from Yavatmal. 
  
Background:
The Indian Express has reported on October 8 and 9 that on October 3, two and a half months after the first death, the government ordered a probe and announced a compensation of Rs 2 lakh to families of each of the deceased. This was after court proceedings, when on October 6, the Nagpur bench of the Bombay High Court issued notices on a PIL seeking criminal action against the officials concerned and pesticide firms. While no action has been taken against anyone so far, Minister of State for Agriculture Sadabhau Khot on Tuesday said, “Officials responsible will be made answerable.”
Cotton cultivation experts and researchers have said the cumulative effect of several factors, such as humidity, spraying of pesticide cocktails and use of a new kind of spraying machine, seem to be behind the deaths of cotton growers in Maharashtra. The number of deaths climbed to 32 on Sunday.
According to these reports, since July 19, 18 farmers have died in Yavatmal and 14 in surrounding districts in the cotton growing belt of the state. The two fresh deaths have been reported from Nagpur and Akola.
 
 
 

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