Inside the Blog

Tribute To Those Toiling Tough

This blog is a tribute to those farmers who toil to feed empty stomaches, but are fed up and frustrated with a system which mocks at their toils.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Dear Prime Minister, Hear Sainath... Thats Our Voice Too

Ever affable P. Sainath has again made a scathing attack on the agriculture, food procurement and food distribution policies of the government with very mild mannered words in an open letter to the Prime Minister of India. Please find the letter which was published in the Hindu on September 14th, 2010.


How right you are, Dr. Singh

P. SAINATH
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Governments have the money to subsidise the building of new cities, malls and multiplexes. But none for building storage space for the nation's foodgrain. File photo
PTIGovernments have the money to subsidise the building of new cities, malls and multiplexes. But none for building storage space for the nation's foodgrain. File photo
When we have policies trample on people's rights, and people go to courts seeking redress, what should the courts do, Prime Minister?
Dear Prime Minister,
I was delighted to learn that you said, while also “respectfully” ticking off the Supreme Court, that tackling food, rotting grain etc., — are all policy matters. You are absolutely right and it was time somebody said so. With that, you brought a whiff of honesty so lacking in the United Progressive Alliance's public blather. It is for your government, not the court, to decide what to do with the grain now rotting in millions of tons. If policy dictates that it go bad rather than let hungry people eat it, that's no business of the court. The “realm of policy formulation,” as you put it, is yours. It feels good to have the nation's leader accept — well, sort of, anyway — that growing hunger, falling nutrition, rotting grain, lack of storage space, all these arise from policy. (They were certainly not caused by any Supreme Court rulings I know of.)
A lesser man would have copped out, blaming it all on the opposition, the weather or the mysterious (but ultimately beneficial) workings of the Market. You don't do that. You clearly locate it in policy. And policies are far more deliberate, far less abstract than markets.
Storage space for foodgrains
It was, after all, a policy decision to spend almost nothing for years on building additional public storage space for foodgrain. Governments have the money to subsidise the building of new cities, malls and multiplexes across the country. By “incentivising” private builders and developers. But none for building storage space for the nation's foodgrain.
The ‘new' idea, instead, is to hire privately-owned space. Which does raise the question sir, of why your government decided, by policy, to de-hire a few million metric tons worth of hired space between 2004 and 2006. That was done on the paid-for advice of an expensive multinational consulting firm. Re-hiring space now will surely mean much higher rental costs, bringing cheer and joy to the hungry, starving rentiers. (Maybe even to the MNC which could now be paid for giving you the opposite of the advice it did the last time.)
More so, since your latest policies “incentivise” things further for the rentiers. Pranabda's budget speech (Point 49) hiked the guaranteed period of space hire from five to seven years. Actually, it's been upped to 10 years since then. (A word of caution from a well-wisher: the reports of that expensive MNC consulting firm have been the kiss of death for any government dumb enough to act on them. Ask Mr. Naidu in Andhra Pradesh.) There was always the option of building foodgrain storage space on government-owned land. As Chhattisgarh is now doing. It would cost much less in the long run and curb profiteering from our need to tackle hunger. These being policy matters, that's just a suggestion, not an order.
As your message makes clear to the Supreme Court, the rotting grain is none of their business. As the nation's most important Professor of Economics, I'm sure you have well-thought out policies on what to do with the grain, rotting or about-to-rot, in open spaces and bad godowns. I just wish someone of your erudition would explain these policies to an increasingly aggressive rat population which thinks it can do anything it likes with that grain and simply ignores the courts altogether. (Maybe we need to incentivise the rodents to lay off the grain.)
Meanwhile, a Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) spokesperson has all but admitted that the National Democratic Alliance (NDA) government had paid the price on this very issue. A wipe-out at the 2004 polls. Amazing what a consensus there is on all these being policy matters. Even the Supreme Court seems to agree.
Nine years ago, Dr. Singh, the apex Court in the very same, ongoing Right to Food case, had this to say (August 20, 2001). “The anxiety of the Court is to see that the poor and the destitute and the weaker sections do not suffer from hunger and starvation. The prevention of the same is one of the prime responsibilities of the Government — whether Central or the State. How this is to be ensured would be a matter of policy which is best left to the government. All that the Court has to be satisfied ... is that the foodgrains ... should not be wasted ... or eaten by rats...What is important is that the food must reach the Hungry.”
The farmers who have been committing suicide in tens of thousands also agree with you totally, Prime Minister. They know it was policies, not the law courts, which drove them to take their lives. That's why several who left behind suicide notes addressed those to you, to the finance minister, or our own beloved Maharashtra chief minister (busy, even as we speak, Saving the Tiger in a TV studio). Ever read any of these letters, Dr. Singh? Has the government of Maharashtra, led by your own party, ever given you a single one of them? They speak of debt, credit, rising input costs and falling prices. Of governments that do not hear their cries. These are not even addressed to their families, but to you, Dr. Singh, and your colleagues. Yes, they understood the role of policy in their misery — and therefore addressed the authors of those policies in their notes.
Farmer distress
Ramakrishna Lonkar of Wardha put it simply in his suicide note after your historic visit to Vidarbha in 2006. He said: “After the Prime Minister's visit and announcements of a fresh crop loan, I thought I could live again.” But “I was shown no respect” at the bank, where nothing had changed. Ramachandra Raut of Washim was so keen to be taken seriously by his Prime Minister, that he not only addressed his suicide note to you, the President and your colleagues, he even recorded it on Rs. 100 non-judicial stamped paper. He was, by his lights, trying to make his protest ‘legal.' Rameshwar Kuchankar's suicide note in Yavatmal blamed the procurement price of cotton for the farmers' distress. Even those letters not addressed to you, speak of policies. Like Sahebrao Adhao's farewell note which paints a Dickensian portrait of usury in the Akola-Amravati belt.
All highlighted policy. And how right they were! Recent revelations (seeTheHindu, August 13, 2010), show us that almost half the total “agricultural credit” in the state of Maharashtra in 2008 was disbursed not by rural banks, but by urban and metropolitan bank branches. Over 42 per cent of it in the financial farming-heartland of Mumbai alone. (Sure, the city has large-scale farming, but of a different kind — it cultivates contracts.) A handful of big corporations seem to hog much of this “agricultural credit.” No wonder Lonkar, Raut et al found it so hard to access credit. You can't have a ‘level playing field' (to borrow one of your favourite phrases) with billionaires.
While these are outflows of policy, the exclusive realm of your government, I confess to being a little flummoxed. The astounding price rise of several years is surely the well-foreseen outcome of government policies? This year, as you lectured world leaders in Toronto on inclusive growth, your government decontrolled petrol prices fully and diesel partially, while hiking kerosene prices, too.
When policies force hundreds of millions to cut their already meagre diets, can they be discussed? When they trample on people's rights, and people go to courts seeking redress, what do the latter do, Prime Minister? You are right that the Supreme Court should not make policy. But what do they do when confronted with the consequences of yours? Policies are made, as you know better than I, by people. In your case by many distinguished economists including those who have fought attempts to ban child labour. One who even wrote an article in The New York Times titled “The Poor Need Child Labour” (November 29, 1994). Where he admitted to having had a 13-year-old work in his home. (And who also favoured the decontrolling of fuel prices — to tackle the price rise, no less. And perhaps to help child labour, too?)
What too, does the Supreme Court do when the government's 2006 promise of a new Below Poverty Line (BPL) Survey to be completed before the start of the Eleventh Plan never materialises? What do they or anyone do when the government sets grain allocations to the states based on poverty estimates of year 2000 based on the 1991 Census. Twenty-year-old data which result in 70 million fewer people getting BPL/Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY) grain than should be the case.
I humbly suggest that while the Supreme Court copes with those dilemmas, we reconsider your policies. I would also be most grateful if you could forward a copy of this letter to your Food and Agriculture Minister if you remember who he is and where he is.
Yours sincerely
P. Sainath

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Its Nuakhai.. Atleast For A Day We Have To Forget That Our Crops Are Failing Again

A year has passed by.... I tried to retrieve what I had said last year on the eve of Nuakhai.... 

"In Sambalpuri, there is a term 'shenrra'. I can not exactly translate that to other language but roughly that means one who has habituated to all odds. The farmers have now become 'shenrra'. While the rain god has not been too kind, pests have menacingly eaten all hopes. Lands are still lying barren, crops have dried, plants have been reduced to their roots. More tears flowing off the farmer's eyes than rainfall dropping on the earth. But still, we the 'shenrras' are going to celebrate the Nuakhai on the 24th. For a day at least, we will not think of our crop and how ours families will survive the year and years to come."

Ironically enough, our skins have become thicker and we have become more 'shenrra'. As we go to celebrate 'Nuakhai' tomorrow, we will at least for half a day forget that many of our crop lands have stayed barren, the cultivated crops are parching. The situation this year has been worse than last year. 

Still we the farmers will continue to thank our god for helping us with a 'grand crop'. 

Of course, irrespective of the status of our crops we eagerly wait for 'Nuakhai' for other reasons as well. This is one day when all family members try their best to converge at place.. all villagers/habitants will great each other. At least for a day we will try our best to make merry... our weakening digestive system will try to eat all delicacies that we can afford; and our ageing legs will try to play youthful sports. Yes, we will also bow our heads to each and every elder (even to whom we have long-standing enemity; or even to whom we do not otherwise consider as worthy of our respect). Nuakhai teaches us that all elders have to be respected, for they definitely know something more than us and take care of us.

So, HAPPY NUAKHAI...! Come join the celebration - On this day nothing comes first than our respect to our gods, elders and our farming.

Friday, September 10, 2010

We Want Our Agriculture Minister To Be Passionate About Agriculture

In this week we saw our honorable agriculture minister Dr Damodar Rout writing two articles in a sequence which was published in the edit page of the Samaj. Coming from an agriculture minister, presumably we expected something on agriculture. And there was no dearth of current issues and topics to discuss on agriculture. Looming threat of severe and widespread drought condition, sudden spurt of farmer suicides etc deserve headlines and editorial spaces in newspapers and news channels.  

But Dr Rout proved us horribly wrong. His two articles had nothing to do with agriculture... the word 'agriculture' or 'farmer' did not even crop in either of the two articles. Both articles tried to advocate how essential big industries are for our development; how forests have to be felled to make way for mining; how barren lands are being described as forest; how government officers converted barren lands as forest from their desks; how water have to be given to the industries etc. The writings carried the stamp of an advocate heavily paid by his clients to strongly present their cases. And his writings made it amply clear who his clients were - Vedanta and Posco. 

Its a pity that our own agriculture minister does not believe that agriculture can bring development to the state. This is ludicrous and pathetic. On one hand we continue to say that our agriculture potentials are severely underutilised and thus the scope for improvement and growth are enormous. But on the other hand our agriculture minister believes that there is no future in agriculture. The minister sheds no tear when a farmer poisons him/herself. But when his pet clients get jolts, he hurriedly devotes all his time to give interviews to channels and pen articles for editorial pages.  

Time to think whether we will be better off without an agriculture minister like him. We have no objection if he is made minister for mines or industries. Then he can write pages and pages and hold hour long briefs for his clients. But Dr Rout presently being an agriculture minister, we cannot probably be that tolerant to his recent talks, writings and actions. 

Dr Rout flaunts his 'farmer background' to justify his qualifications for the present post, i.e., of an agriculture minister . We thank him for being a farmer at some point in his past. But we hope that he will stick to that identity and work to make agriculture the chief vehicle of our state's development.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

They Call it Bauxite Mines, We Call It Our Prized Hills and Cherished Heritage

Gandhamardan Hills

Niyamgiri Hills and Vedanta's Lanjigarh Refinary

Karlapat Hills and Dense Forest

Maliparbat Hills

Sijilimali Hills

Krishunmali Hills

Kuturumali Hills

Pottangi Hills

Balada Hills

Kodingamali Hills


Baphilimali Hills being eyed by Utkal Alumina

Friday, September 3, 2010

Save Migrant Labourer Basumati Suna and Her Kid From Captivity

Even after 11 days of pleading Ashok Muna is still clueless about the fate of his wife and kid who have been held hostage by a brick kiln owner in far away Bangalore.

This is an update on Basumati Muna and her kid’s illegal confinement by a brick kiln owner near Bangalur. Please find the details of Ashok Muna’s - Basumati’s husband – escape and illegal confinement and mistreatment Basumati and her child in a detailed sequence.

The case:
1.        Ashok Muna, aged about 25 years (of village Ghagra in Luhasingha Gram Panchayat of Patnagarh Block in Balangir district in the state of Orissa) had migrated to Bangaluru (Bangalore) along with his wife Basumati, aged about 21 years, to work as a labourer in a brick kiln.
2.        The family had earlier migrated to Bangaluru in 2008 also.
3.       A girl was born to them in the year 2008, while they were there in the Bangaluru the brick kiln. But due to lack of treatment at work place  the infant died there and the family came back to their native village to complete the ritual.
4.       Ashok Muna’s family is very poor and belongs to Dalit community. Ashok was debt burdened. And he was again lured by brick kiln owner  S. K. Rajasekhar (Phone no.: 09141609517) to rejoin as a labourer in the Bangaluru brick kiln.
5.      - Ashok was reluctant but succumbed to the lure of the brick kiln owner as he had no other way.
6.       The brick kiln owner sent Rs 20,000 as advance to Ashok in August 2009.
7.       Ashok, along with his then pregnant wife Basumati, left their village in early September, 2009.
8.       They worked in the brick kiln from September 2009 to July 2010 (11 months). In the meanwhile, a son was born to them there.
9.     They were living in inhuman condition at the brick kiln site. The owner and supervisor were constantly rebuking and beating them.
10.   When Basumati was in the advanced stage of pregnancy and later delivered her child she could not work.  
11.   As his wife could not work  Ashok was asked to do other very hard labour requiring chores throughout the day and night and was paid only 100 rupees per day as wage (note: Normally a whole family works as one unit for brick production. As Basumati could not work, Ashok too could not produce brick alone).
12.   Along with Ashok some other families from his area had also gone there to work in the brick kiln.
13.   As the brick kiln owner’s torture became unbearable some of those family members escaped from that kiln.
14.   After that, the brick kiln owner started torturing Ashok more and was forcing him to get those escaped families back. Ashok neither had any role in taking them (the escaped families) to the brick kiln nor had any role in their escape. Hence, Ashok was in no position to either ascertain their whereabouts or get them back again.  But the, brick kiln owner was not listening to anything and was consistently reprimanding Ashok to’ get them back or face consequences’.
15.   In July, 2010 Ashok asked for a leave to his house as both Basumati and their kid were not keeping well.  But the brick kiln owner not only refused that request but he also threatened Ashok to get the escaped labourers back to work soon. Alternatively, he asked Ashok to pay Rs 50,000 (fifty thousand rupees).  The brick kiln owner was claiming that the escaped labourers own him Rs 50,000.
16.   Ashok and his family’s every move were regulated by the owner. As pressures from the owner became unbearable a desperate Ashok tried hard to find out the whereabouts of the escaped laborers.
17.   He learnt that some of them are working at a brick kiln near Hyderabad.
18.   In mid July, Ashok escaped from the kiln to Hyderabad to persuade the escaped labourers (as he and his family were held hostage by the brick kiln owner because of them).
19.   He stayed for close to a month at the Hyderabad kiln just to persuade them. But the escaped labourers bluntly refused to return their citing gross ill-treatment at the Bangaluru kiln.
20.   Ashok was dumb struck at this. As he found no other way, he requested S.P. Manjunath Gounda – the Superviser of Bangaluru kiln – to come over to Hyderabad and talk to the labourers directly.
21.   The Superviser came to Bangaluru and talked to the escaped labourers directly. But as the labourers still refused, Manjunath threatened Ashok that his wife will be kept hostage as long as he fails to get the labourers back.
22.   Ashok consulted his family members and fellow villagers. They advised him to come back to the village and take help of the district administration.  
23.   Ashok was was at sea. He was unsure and undecided. On one hand his wife and small kid have been held hostage by a hostile kiln owner and on the other hand he had no other way to persuade the kiln owner.
24.   Seeing no other option, Ashok came back to village - directly from Hyderabad. He reached his village on August 19.
25.   On August 21, he came to Balangir (about 70 kilometers from his village) and petitioned the District Collector about his plight.
26.   The District Collector asked him to go to the ‘Labour office’ and lodge his complaint there.
27.   The district labour office asked him to give details in writing. Since, Ashok was illiterate he could not write the details and came back to his village.
28.   Later, with others help he has sent the details through post to the district labour office.

Present status:
1.       Ashok’s wife Basumati and their kid are still held hostage by the brick kiln owner near Bangaluru.
2.       Both Basumati and the kid are unwell and the kiln owner is not providing any treatment to them. A tumor is developing in Basumati’s nose. The kid has fever and is malnourished.
3.       The district administration has not yet established any contact with their counterparts.

The brick kiln where Basumati is held as hostage
-          The brick kiln is located at a distance of about two kilometers from Arghagate bus stop to Sabenhalli road.
-          Arghagate can be reached by bus number 285 (which plies between Yelehenka and Rajenkhunta)
-          There are many brick kilns along Arghagate Sabenhalli road. This particular brick kiln can be identified by SLN (and LNB) brand or by the name of the owner (S. K. Rajasekhar).
-           It falls under Rajenkhunta police station. The brick kiln is at a distance of about three kilometers from the Rajenkhunta police station.

Possible contacts:
-          The owner of the brick kiln S.K. Rajasekhar’s phone number is +91-9141609517.
-          The brick kiln superviser S.P. Manjunath’s number is +91-9845755518
-          Another worker’s (Ashok could not name him) phone number is +91-9535394601 (He works in the same brick kiln but Ashok was telling that he is a stoop of the owner and hence to be dealt with carefully)
-          Now Ashok Muna too has a phone number. He can be contacted at +91-9668074591.

More threats:
-          Ashok’s father in law and their family work in another brick kiln owned by the same owner. And they also have been held hostage.
-          That kiln (brand name LNB) is situated on Yelehnka to Jankur to Samkeli Road. The kiln is near a stream (Near Jakar Lebed)

This morning when I talked to Ashok he was sobbing endlessly. Please help in getting Basumati and her kid back.