(News) Farmers are reverting to distress suicides in Bundelkhand
Farmers are reverting to distress suicides in Bundelkhand
Even
as the nationalised and private lenders pat their backs, flaunting mounting
number of Kisan Credit Cards (KCCs) disbursed, the credit worn farmers in
Bundelkhand region of Uttar Pradesh are reverting to distress suicides,
reminiscent of the situation two years back. The latest incident involves a
peasant from Banda mandal, who hanged himself to death giving in to his
inability to repay debt of Rs 50,000 he had borrowed from local branch of
Allahabad Bank.
Locals fear that such incidents are poised to recur if timely and adequate
pre-emptive measures are not initiated. It may be noticed that the Banda mandal
has the distinction of maximum farmers having obtained KCCs, 22,675 to be
precise.
According to official data, total harvest loans amounting to Rs 125.47 crore has
been disbursed to the farmers of Banda alone, which the farmers are not in a
position to repay, threatening to bring back the dark days of mass distress
suicides in the region.
Adding to the fear is the imminent failure of pulse and millet crops sown by the
farmers, which have been heavily hit due to premature rise in temperature. The
temperature has touched 40 degrees in March itself, ruining the crops.
Last year, the spate of hundreds of suicides had been arrested owing to the
mammoth loan waiver by the UPA government prior to the Assembly polls. The
drought that followed in August last had begun to sow the seeds for impending
disaster six months later, further aggravated by the mindless and missionary
zeal distribution of KCCs by the lending institutions.
Now fearing torture at the hands of lenders and losing self-esteem, the farmers
are resorting to suicides again. The last seven years have seen an accentuation
of adverse weather conditions in the region with farmers hit by prolonged
drought, hailstorms and decrease in annual rainfall. Compared to the situation
25-30 years ago, there has been a sharp decrease in rainfall in recent times
with rains being restricted to much lesser number of days in a year.
Though almost the entire region is covered by the government’s National Rural
Employment Guarantee Scheme, which aims not only to provide employment but to
restore infrastructure in villages by undertaking water conservation, repair and
upkeep of village tanks among other things., still many blocks remain where not
a single household has received 100 days of work or unemployment allowance.
Pointing out problems with implementation of the scheme Sanjay Singh of a local
NGO, Paramarth, says those who got job under the scheme barely had 20 days of
work; even wages of many workers have not been paid for many months.
Where the administration could have stepped in to change things for the better
they have failed miserably. Proper implementation of the employment guarantee
scheme could do a lot to salvage the farmers’ situation.
Courtesy: Sify.com
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