Government to provide $220 million in aid, source says
Mumbai: Unseasonal rains and
hailstorms this month have damaged the winter-sown crops of millions of
Indian farmers, but Rekha Garole lost more than others.
Her 42-year-old husband
Santuka killed himself this month after hail devastated the wheat and
chickpea crops that they had been counting on to repay a bank loan of
Rs90,000 (Dh5,447 or $1,500).
“He committed suicide to
escape his debt burden,” says Rekha, who met nearly a dozen political
leaders in a week at her mud house in the Nanded district of western
Maharashtra state but has yet to receive any financial aid.
Santuka, like other farmers
in his village of Golegaon, prayed last year for bountiful rains to end
two years of drought in the region.
Millions of small Indian
farmers are struggling to survive as erratic weather hits their only
source of income. They are seeking government help to stay afloat until
the next harvest, but bureaucrats are moving slowly to record crop
losses.
Anger is mounting among affected farmers tired of hearing empty promises. Many have given up hope.
Nearly five dozen farmers in
Maharashtra and the central state of Madhya Pradesh have committed
suicide this month over debt worries, farmers’ advocacy groups say.
This could spell trouble for
the ruling Congress party in a five-week general election that starts on
April 7, as the farmers’ vote helped it retain power in 2009. Opinion
polls suggest that Congress faces a heavy defeat.
“It will make the government
more unpopular just before the elections,” said Jaidev Dole, a political
analyst based in the city of Aurangabad in Maharashtra.
“The farmers affected are
unhappy with the government’s response, and that can be reflected in
votes. Opposition parties have already started to make this an election
issue.” In Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra, nearly 3 million hectares of
crops have been hit, Farm Minister Sharad Pawar said. Crops have been
damaged in the northern states of Rajasthan and Punjab and in southern
Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh to a lesser extent.
Orange, grape and mango farmers were the worst hit by the storms, along with wheat, rapeseed, chickpea and red gram.
The damage could force the
government to slash production estimates for key winter-sown crops like
rapeseed, chickpea and wheat, but the immediate worry would be vegetable
supplies.
Prices rise again
After moderating in recent
weeks, vegetable prices have started to rise again as supplies have been
disrupted by the rains. Double-digit food inflation contributed to the
Congress party’s defeat in key state elections last year.
Opposition parties, mainly
the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) that is favourite to form the next
government, are already cornering the government over farmer suicides
and price rises.
Campaigning in the hail-hit
areas, the BJP’s candidate for prime minister, Narendra Modi, said:
“Despite India being an agrarian economy, the government’s wrong
policies are forcing farmers to commit suicide.” The central government
will provide 13.5 billion rupees ($220 million) to farmers hit by the
precipitation in Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh, a government source
said on Thursday.
Farmers’ leaders say the aid is too little even to cover the cost of seeds and fertilisers.
“Farmers have taken loans
from banks and private money lenders. With government help of a few
thousand rupees, they can’t even repay their debts,” said Vijay
Jawandhia, a farmers’ leader from Maharashtra.
Any financial help comes too
late for Rekha, who has two school-age children: “After a suicide
everyone makes promises,” she told Reuters by phone. “But the ones who
commit suicide will never return.”
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