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40% rise in farmer suicides in Maharashtra

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40% rise in farmer suicides in Maharashtra - The Times of India
Priyanka Kakodkar,TNN | Mar 22, 2015, 06.25 AM IST

BEED: He had his hopes pinned on his tiny field of jowar. Sandeep Shinde had carefully nurtured it after the drought singed his cotton crop last October. Yet days before the new crop was due for harvest last week, the rain pelted down hard. The jowar stalks collapsed into the mud and the grain turned black. A few hours later, the 27-year-old hung himself with a nylon rope from a tree in his field in Patoda taluka.

Shinde had not managed a decent crop in the last three years in this arid belt, running up debts of 1.2 lakh. The drought and bouts of rain wrecked his chances of breaking even. "He was worried about his loans and talked of migrating," says family friend Rajabhau Deshmukh.

His widow Shobha is anxious about her four-year-old son and one-year-old daughter. "I cannot even afford milk for the children," she says.

In a state where farmer suicides have become endemic, the widespread drought followed by freak rains and hailstorms have pushed many more over the edge. In many cases, the calamities claimed two successive crops.

Farmer suicides shot up by over 40% in the last seven months when the impact of these twin calamities kicked in compared to the same span last year, state government data shows. The state reported 975 suicides by farmers between January to July 2014. The figure rose to a steep 1,373 between August 2014, when the drought set in, and February 2015.

The region of Marathwada, which was among those worst hit by the drought, has seen the sharpest increase in suicides by farmers during the same period. The suicides here have risen by 85%. Every single village in the region was declared drought-affected.

Even large land-holders are committing suicide in Georai, which is part of Aurangabad's Beed district and is located close to the Jayakwadi dam. Gangadhar Shendge, who committed suicide two weeks ago, had an 18-acre farm. "Our entire kharif crop was ruined. We did not sow the rabi crop at all," says his son Mahadev Shendge. Across the state, sowing for the rabi winter crop was down by 40%.

Officials say the state is facing a potent combination of three types of drought. "The poor rain points to meterological drought, ground water depletion signals hydrological drought. And the drop in yield means we have agricultural drought as well," says Aurangabad divisional commissioner Umakant Dangat.

He attributes the changing weather patterns to climate change. "The late arrival and early withdrawal of the monsoon, the long gaps between bouts of rain and the freak hailstorms, point to climate change," he says.

Farming economics don't add up

But the vagaries of nature apart, experts say the economics of farming are tilted against the farmer even at the best of times. "The farmer is facing low yield because of the drought. Add to this the high price of cultivation and low price for the crop. How is he expected to survive?" asks farming activist Vijay Jawandia.

The minimum cost of production for a quintal of cotton is Rs 5,200. The market price for a quintal last year was Rs 5,000, which means the farmer could break even. Today the price is only Rs 3,600-3,800, Jawandia points out.

Bizarre policies like encouraging the water-guzzling sugarcane crop in this drought-prone zone have added to the water stress, experts say. Marathwada has 2.4 lakh hectares under the crop and boasts of 61 sugar factories.

"The water used for one hectare of sugarcane can irrigate over 8 hectares of rabi jowar. It should not be grown in arid regions. Sugarcane occupies five per cent of the state's land but commands 60 per cent of its irrigation water," points out Pradeep Purandare, expert member of the Marathwada Statutory Development Board.

Irrigation facilities in Marathwada remain rudimentary. But even the potential created is poorly utilized. Of the 10 lakh hectares of irrigation potential created in Marathwada, just three lakh hectares are utilized, according to the divisional commissioner.

The poor management of irrigation facilities has resulted in the rampant exploitation of ground-water, as farmers turn to borewells and tubewells. The majority of talukas in the region are reporting a dip in ground water levels compared to the last five years, escalating the water crisis in the region.
 
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40% rise in farmer suicides in Maharashtra - The Times of India
Priyanka Kakodkar,TNN | Mar 22, 2015, 06.25 AM IST

BEED: He had his hopes pinned on his tiny field of jowar. Sandeep Shinde had carefully nurtured it after the drought singed his cotton crop last October. Yet days before the new crop was due for harvest last week, the rain pelted down hard. The jowar stalks collapsed into the mud and the grain turned black. A few hours later, the 27-year-old hung himself with a nylon rope from a tree in his field in Patoda taluka.

Shinde had not managed a decent crop in the last three years in this arid belt, running up debts of 1.2 lakh. The drought and bouts of rain wrecked his chances of breaking even. "He was worried about his loans and talked of migrating," says family friend Rajabhau Deshmukh.

His widow Shobha is anxious about her four-year-old son and one-year-old daughter. "I cannot even afford milk for the children," she says.

In a state where farmer suicides have become endemic, the widespread drought followed by freak rains and hailstorms have pushed many more over the edge. In many cases, the calamities claimed two successive crops.

Farmer suicides shot up by over 40% in the last seven months when the impact of these twin calamities kicked in compared to the same span last year, state government data shows. The state reported 975 suicides by farmers between January to July 2014. The figure rose to a steep 1,373 between August 2014, when the drought set in, and February 2015.

The region of Marathwada, which was among those worst hit by the drought, has seen the sharpest increase in suicides by farmers during the same period. The suicides here have risen by 85%. Every single village in the region was declared drought-affected.

Even large land-holders are committing suicide in Georai, which is part of Aurangabad's Beed district and is located close to the Jayakwadi dam. Gangadhar Shendge, who committed suicide two weeks ago, had an 18-acre farm. "Our entire kharif crop was ruined. We did not sow the rabi crop at all," says his son Mahadev Shendge. Across the state, sowing for the rabi winter crop was down by 40%.

Officials say the state is facing a potent combination of three types of drought. "The poor rain points to meterological drought, ground water depletion signals hydrological drought. And the drop in yield means we have agricultural drought as well," says Aurangabad divisional commissioner Umakant Dangat.

He attributes the changing weather patterns to climate change. "The late arrival and early withdrawal of the monsoon, the long gaps between bouts of rain and the freak hailstorms, point to climate change," he says.

Farming economics don't add up

But the vagaries of nature apart, experts say the economics of farming are tilted against the farmer even at the best of times. "The farmer is facing low yield because of the drought. Add to this the high price of cultivation and low price for the crop. How is he expected to survive?" asks farming activist Vijay Jawandia.

The minimum cost of production for a quintal of cotton is Rs 5,200. The market price for a quintal last year was Rs 5,000, which means the farmer could break even. Today the price is only Rs 3,600-3,800, Jawandia points out.

Bizarre policies like encouraging the water-guzzling sugarcane crop in this drought-prone zone have added to the water stress, experts say. Marathwada has 2.4 lakh hectares under the crop and boasts of 61 sugar factories.

"The water used for one hectare of sugarcane can irrigate over 8 hectares of rabi jowar. It should not be grown in arid regions. Sugarcane occupies five per cent of the state's land but commands 60 per cent of its irrigation water," points out Pradeep Purandare, expert member of the Marathwada Statutory Development Board.

Irrigation facilities in Marathwada remain rudimentary. But even the potential created is poorly utilized. Of the 10 lakh hectares of irrigation potential created in Marathwada, just three lakh hectares are utilized, according to the divisional commissioner.

The poor management of irrigation facilities has resulted in the rampant exploitation of ground-water, as farmers turn to borewells and tubewells. The majority of talukas in the region are reporting a dip in ground water levels compared to the last five years, escalating the water crisis in the region.
Hopefully the new Government will deliver where the previous one failed.
 
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I hope with BJP sarkar in center and state, acche din for Farmer's come soon. :cray:
 
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40% rise in farmer suicides in Maharashtra - The Times of India
Priyanka Kakodkar,TNN | Mar 22, 2015, 06.25 AM IST

BEED: He had his hopes pinned on his tiny field of jowar. Sandeep Shinde had carefully nurtured it after the drought singed his cotton crop last October. Yet days before the new crop was due for harvest last week, the rain pelted down hard. The jowar stalks collapsed into the mud and the grain turned black. A few hours later, the 27-year-old hung himself with a nylon rope from a tree in his field in Patoda taluka.

Shinde had not managed a decent crop in the last three years in this arid belt, running up debts of 1.2 lakh. The drought and bouts of rain wrecked his chances of breaking even. "He was worried about his loans and talked of migrating," says family friend Rajabhau Deshmukh.

His widow Shobha is anxious about her four-year-old son and one-year-old daughter. "I cannot even afford milk for the children," she says.

In a state where farmer suicides have become endemic, the widespread drought followed by freak rains and hailstorms have pushed many more over the edge. In many cases, the calamities claimed two successive crops.

Farmer suicides shot up by over 40% in the last seven months when the impact of these twin calamities kicked in compared to the same span last year, state government data shows. The state reported 975 suicides by farmers between January to July 2014. The figure rose to a steep 1,373 between August 2014, when the drought set in, and February 2015.

The region of Marathwada, which was among those worst hit by the drought, has seen the sharpest increase in suicides by farmers during the same period. The suicides here have risen by 85%. Every single village in the region was declared drought-affected.

Even large land-holders are committing suicide in Georai, which is part of Aurangabad's Beed district and is located close to the Jayakwadi dam. Gangadhar Shendge, who committed suicide two weeks ago, had an 18-acre farm. "Our entire kharif crop was ruined. We did not sow the rabi crop at all," says his son Mahadev Shendge. Across the state, sowing for the rabi winter crop was down by 40%.

Officials say the state is facing a potent combination of three types of drought. "The poor rain points to meterological drought, ground water depletion signals hydrological drought. And the drop in yield means we have agricultural drought as well," says Aurangabad divisional commissioner Umakant Dangat.

He attributes the changing weather patterns to climate change. "The late arrival and early withdrawal of the monsoon, the long gaps between bouts of rain and the freak hailstorms, point to climate change," he says.

Farming economics don't add up

But the vagaries of nature apart, experts say the economics of farming are tilted against the farmer even at the best of times. "The farmer is facing low yield because of the drought. Add to this the high price of cultivation and low price for the crop. How is he expected to survive?" asks farming activist Vijay Jawandia.

The minimum cost of production for a quintal of cotton is Rs 5,200. The market price for a quintal last year was Rs 5,000, which means the farmer could break even. Today the price is only Rs 3,600-3,800, Jawandia points out.

Bizarre policies like encouraging the water-guzzling sugarcane crop in this drought-prone zone have added to the water stress, experts say. Marathwada has 2.4 lakh hectares under the crop and boasts of 61 sugar factories.

"The water used for one hectare of sugarcane can irrigate over 8 hectares of rabi jowar. It should not be grown in arid regions. Sugarcane occupies five per cent of the state's land but commands 60 per cent of its irrigation water," points out Pradeep Purandare, expert member of the Marathwada Statutory Development Board.

Irrigation facilities in Marathwada remain rudimentary. But even the potential created is poorly utilized. Of the 10 lakh hectares of irrigation potential created in Marathwada, just three lakh hectares are utilized, according to the divisional commissioner.

The poor management of irrigation facilities has resulted in the rampant exploitation of ground-water, as farmers turn to borewells and tubewells. The majority of talukas in the region are reporting a dip in ground water levels compared to the last five years, escalating the water crisis in the region.

hope maha govt. waives the crop loans as being done by tg and a.p govts..
 
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Hopefully the new Government will deliver where the previous one failed.

Ours farmers are dieing since decades because of the international subsidy system and that scheme of micro financing made things more troublesome for the farmers, insurance schemes have been introduced.

PM Modi has assured the farmers that Land Acquisition Bill is for the welfare of the farmers, their children and the villages.Hope ours farmers suffering will be reduced.
 
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Maharashtra get highest package of Rs 2,000 cr for drought: CM Fadnavis | The Indian Express

Written by Shubhangi Khapre | Mumbai | Published on:March 24, 2015 9:22 pm
The chief minister Devendra Fadnavis on Tuesday revealed that centre has sanctioned Rs 2,000 crore drought relief package to Maharashtra. The state is also hoping the centre would concede their demand for higher allocations for crop and horticulture losses due to hailstorm which is still awaited. Today’s decision was confined to drought relief package. State is seeking at least Rs 1,000 crore more by conservative estimate.

The union home minister Rajnath Singh convened a meeting Tuesday in Delhi to discuss the financial allocations to drought hit areas across country. The union minister for agriculture Radhamohan Singh, union finance minister Arun Jaitely et al were present at the meeting. At the end of the meeting centre conveyed the decision to Fadnavis.
A visibly pleased Fadnavis said, “This is the highest financial drought package offered by centre to Maharashtra.” While, I acknowledge we have a formidable task ahead to tackle the agrarian crisis posed by drought coupled with periodical hailstorm and unseasonal rains, centre’s positive consideration to our proposal will prove very helpful.

Fadnavis was quick to make a distinction that the financial package was confined for drought relief alone. And that the efforts of the state government to seek additional allocations from the centre to tackle the losses due to hailstorm and unseasonal rains is still awaited.

Apart from this the state government is also working with various central departments namely ministry of agriculture and ministry of rural development to link the centre-state schemes to reap the benefits to drought hit Vidarbha and Marathwada. A senior secretary in ministry of agriculture revealed to Indian Express, “ Although centre has granted Rs 2,000 crore to combat drought, we would pursue with them to enhance the allocations in the coming months. We had send a proposal seeking Rs 6,000 crore for drought.”

Till date the state government has already spend Rs 4,000 crore as drought relief. Asked why state which is reeling under drought for the third consecutive year could not bargain for higher allocations, Fadnavis said, “ While we don’t underestimate the challenges ahead, let us not overlook the factor that this is highest ever package from centre to state for drought.”

The chief minister said, “ I am saying it big package because previous governments (Congress-NCP) never got more than Rs 600 and Rs 700 crore for drought.” And they would send the proposals of Rs 14,000 crore, he added. Not to forget the union agriculture minister was Sharad Pawar at centre.

Asked to comment on former prime minister Manmohan Singh’s big pckage after he toured the Vidarbha reeling under farmer’s suicide (2004-06), Fadnavis said, “ The package was essentially loan waiver and long term drought mitigation plans over the years.” Today, what we received is for drought relief which is highest ever received by state.

Congress-NCP government used to send the proposals demanding Rs 14,000 crore. But the maximum they managed to get was between Rs 600 and Rs 700 crore.” The chief minister
 
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and here in Pakistan our great sir Imran Khan (though i myself is his supporter) give us lectures on how well Indian and regional farmers are doing ...

Center and State Governments have to do more for the Indian Farmers. Can you provide source of Imran Khan statement ?

Data from World Bank shows that around 60.3 percent of India's land area is agricultural land and the total number of agricultural workers in the country, comprising of cultivators and agricultural labourers, have increased from 234.1 million in 2001 to 263.1 million in 2011.
 
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Center and State Governments have to do more for the Indian Farmers. Can you provide source of Imran Khan statement ?

Data from World Bank shows that around 60.3 percent of India's land area is agricultural land and the total number of agricultural workers in the country, comprising of cultivators and agricultural labourers, have increased from 234.1 million in 2001 to 263.1 million in 2011.

lol its difficult to find this ... but u can find it in his dharna speech.. he talked about the subsides govt of India provide to farmers like Free electricity for Tube wells and etc..

i find this on Dawn

IMRAN Khan is always telling the audience in his public addresses that the peasants in India enjoy special concessions like free electricity, subsidised fertilizers and seeds etc, therefore they are happy and prosperous.

If this is true, then may I ask Imran Khan, why is it that thousands of farmers routinely commit suicide in India? In 2012 alone, 13,754 farmers committed suicide in India because they were unable to repay their debt to private money lenders because of failed crops.

Authentic figures for 2013 and 2014 are hard to come by, but the fact that 204 farmers committed suicide in the first four months of 2014 in the Indian state of Maharashtra alone speaks volumes about the problems and misery faced by Indian farmers. One should remember that Maharashtra with 80 million people is the second largest state of India which has a population of 1.3 billion!

India also has 33 million Dalits or untouchables who are social outcasts. They have no right to even exist. India also has the worst human rights record with regards to Kashmir (100,000 Muslims in the Indian occupied valley have been killed by the Indian army).

Imran Khan please take note.

Safir A. Siddiqui

The Indian peasant - Newspaper - DAWN.COM
 
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lol its difficult to find this ... but u can find it in his dharna speech.. he talked about the subsides govt of India provide to farmers like Free electricity for Tube wells and etc..

i find this on Dawn

IMRAN Khan is always telling the audience in his public addresses that the peasants in India enjoy special concessions like free electricity, subsidised fertilizers and seeds etc, therefore they are happy and prosperous.

If this is true, then may I ask Imran Khan, why is it that thousands of farmers routinely commit suicide in India? In 2012 alone, 13,754 farmers committed suicide in India because they were unable to repay their debt to private money lenders because of failed crops.

Authentic figures for 2013 and 2014 are hard to come by, but the fact that 204 farmers committed suicide in the first four months of 2014 in the Indian state of Maharashtra alone speaks volumes about the problems and misery faced by Indian farmers. One should remember that Maharashtra with 80 million people is the second largest state of India which has a population of 1.3 billion!

India also has 33 million Dalits or untouchables who are social outcasts. They have no right to even exist. India also has the worst human rights record with regards to Kashmir (100,000 Muslims in the Indian occupied valley have been killed by the Indian army).

Imran Khan please take note.

Safir A. Siddiqui

The Indian peasant - Newspaper - DAWN.COM

Government of India and State Governments are working on the farmers suicide issue since decades and now India is self reliant but still work has to be done for farmers. Indians have not forget when we were having rice shortages shortly after Independence in 1947 and how hard it was for the Indian Population. The Slogan Jai Jawan and Jai Kishan was to become self sufficient and protect our borders.
 
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Government of India and State Governments are working on the farmers suicide issue since decades and now India is self reliant. Indians have not forget when we were having rice shortages shortly after Independence in 1947 and how hard it was for the Indian Population. The Slogan Jai Jawan and Jai Kishan was to become self sufficient and protect our borders.

Good luck to u bro..
 
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Wait until the farm sector gets reformed
you will have millions of people hitting the cities

There have been immigration from rural areas to urban areas in search of employment and if proper investment is being done within the rural areas specially in agriculture sector and even set up small scale industries then rural population will be in rural areas.
 
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BEED: He had his hopes pinned on his tiny field of jowar.

first some context on this town called beed from where the reporter is reporting from.

Female foetuses in Beed fed to dogs to hide evidence | Daily Mail Online

so beed town and its state, maharashtra, are the bases of many a human atrocity and tragedy.

In a state where farmer suicides have become endemic, the widespread drought followed by freak rains and hailstorms have pushed many more over the edge.

nonsense... there is no human reason for farmers to commit suicide because of rain or drought... there is only the indian reason... india is the most capitalist society in history where the citizens are encouraged to make money off each other in every inhuman way possible and where the governments have put taxes of every kind possible just so that they could become the highest importer of armaments to fight against self-created enemies and to point their rifles where nato says... india's extreme capitalism and non-scientific farming techniques are the reason for these farmers to commit suicide.

in the libyan jamahiriya started decades back was history's biggest water delivery system, the "great man-made river" project... big diameter pipelines whose network ran thousands of kilometers from the libyan desert underground natural reservoirs... and this water delivered free of money by libya's socialist system to libyan citizens... this water system removed the drought part of the problem... and this was done in a desert country !!!

this is socialism at work, where human life is sacred and worship of money is anti-human, as it should be...

from ( Libya’s “Water Wars” and Gaddafi`s Great Man-Made River Project | Global Research - Centre for Research on Globalization )...
The ‘rivers’ are a 4000-kilometer network of 4 meters diameter lined concrete pipes, buried below the desert sands to prevent evaporation. There are 1300 wells, 500,000 sections of pipe, 3700 kilometers of haul roads, and 250 million cubic meters of excavation. All material for the project was locally manufactured. Large reservoirs provide storage, and pumping stations control the flow into the cities.

images


gmmr1.jpg


1087-world7.jpg


gmmr-3.jpg


libios-gmmr.jpeg


aerial-d171a08a6eecc9762f2cb9f471cfb069_h.jpg


below is a pipeline near bani walid town, bombed by nato's puppets in 2012...

Photo-Explosion-of-the-water-pipeline-Man-Made-River-in-Bani-Walid.jpg



from ( How Gaddafi’s Great Man-Made River Project became part of Water Wars - English pravda.ru )...
In 1999, UNESCO accepted Libya's offer to fund the Great Man-Made River International Water Prize, an award that rewards remarkable scientific research work on water usage in arid areas.


from ( GMR (Great Man-Made River) Water Supply Project - Water Technology )...
On 22 July 2011 Nato warplanes attacked a pipe making plant at Brega killing six of the facility's security guards. Nato claimed that the building had been used as a military storage facility and rockets were launched from there by pro-Gadaffi troops.

The attack came shortly after Libya warned that Nato-led air strikes could cause a "human and environmental disaster" if air strikes damaged the Great Man-Made River project. Reports indicate that damage to infrastructure was not serious enough to completely stop the river from running.


for more, ( GGMR1 ).

"He was worried about his loans and talked of migrating," says family friend Rajabhau Deshmukh.

did this fellow think twice before taking loans for the wrongest and very indian of reasons... four-day weddings with 300 guests, pilgrimage for "elderly parents", sending the son to some engineering or mba college in bangalore or andhra so that he becomes a wage-slave, the 7th festival celebration since the start of the year etc.

1. the governments haven't bothered all these decades to construct water pipelines to deliver free water to farmers, they are left waiting for irregular rains.

2. electricity is not free... nothing is free in india, except atrocities.

3. the farmers don't follow scientific techniques ( and common sense ) so their crops are easily washed away in rain.

Bizarre policies like encouraging the water-guzzling sugarcane crop in this drought-prone zone have added to the water stress, experts say.

The jowar stalks collapsed into the mud and the grain turned black.

can those "experts" say why eating jowar ( instead of growing sugarcane ) hasn't turned the maharashtra farmers into super geniuses??

and here in Pakistan our great sir Imran Khan (though i myself is his supporter) give us lectures on how well Indian and regional farmers are doing ...

many indian farmers don't know much... i am here talking just about their farming - "ancient" and useless techniques... they didn't learn much from the americans who gave india its "green revolution" in the 60's which anyway was most disastrous for global environment and is another string in the india story.

Ours farmers are dieing since decades because of the international subsidy system and that scheme of micro financing made things more troublesome for the farmers, insurance schemes have been introduced.

what "international subsidy system", sir??

and this "micro-finance" is very indian in nature, yes?? capitalism is deeply embedded in indian culture after all... so what if mba colleges are american invention and "micro-finance" is uno-promoted capitalism... it was very indian to neither reject mba colleges nor "micro finance".

"insurance" is a idiotic system meant to make money for capitalists from speculation on the lives of humans when instead their national government should have removed the trouble of money from human lives and given these humans either things for free or at low price.

I hope with BJP sarkar in center and state, acche din for Farmer's come soon. :cray:

how?? have modi sarkaar and sangh parivaar turned into socialists suddenly, someone who consider human life to be sacred and not worship of money and religious idols??

Gujju Bhai Modi doesnot care about ghattis

modi bhai cares only about religio-nationalism and "ancient indian" human genetics, not about current human miseries.

----------------------

@The_Showstopper @Aamna Ali @Razia Sultana @takeiteasy
 
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