Until now, the problem of remunerative prices only
affected commercial crops. But this year it has also badly hit foodgrains, like
rice and other cereals. Today, 25 lakh tonnes of rice are lying unsold in the
rice-miller’s godowns — which was purchased from the peasantry at throw-away
rates.
Last November the Swarna variety of rice fetched a
price of Rs. 425 per 75 kg. bag. This year it has dropped to Rs. 360. Also, high
quality rice like Sona Masuri, has no market. Besides, in the current year the
FCI began treating Sona Masuri as a common variety, instead of the Grade ‘A’
normally given to it (This was later reversed due to farmers’ pressure). Old
rice, which last year fetched Rs. 750 per 75 kg. bag is only getting Rs. 500
this year.
After the completion of the ongoing Kharif season
(July to December) another 82 lakh tonnes of produce will reach the market, and
a further 40 lakh tonnes during the Rabi season. A disastrous situation is
facing the peasantry, for if stocks continue to mount, the prices will crash
even further with the peasantry resorting to distress sales.
It is ironic that, while lakhs of people in AP are
starving, unable to purchase their basic food due to hiked up PDS rates,
thousands of tonnes of rice are rotting in the godowns.
A similar situation is faced by the bumper maize
crop. Cultivated in 4.07 lakh hectors of land, the peasantry got a good crop
this year of 13 lakh tonnes. But this was of little value for that section of
the peasantry that tried to sell its surplus. Prices this year crashed from Rs.
700 per quintal to Rs. 300 per quintal. And even at this low price there were no
buyers.
Red Gram too was likely to face a similar
situation. Even two months before the harvest, the rate had dropped from Rs.
2,300 per quintal to Rs. 1,100.
The state of the groundnut crop was even worse. It
faced a double attack of poor yields and low prices. AP is the second largest
producer of groundnuts (after Gujarat) with 48 lakh acres under groundnut
cultivation. Of this, one-third is in the Rayalaseema region which has faced
drought conditions in six years of the past decade. This year the yield was
barely 5½ quintals per hectare, while prices dropped from Rs. 1000 to Rs. 700
per quintal, compared to the government rate of Rs. 1,200 per quintal. Besides,
cost of inputs have skyrocketed, coming to roughly Rs. 9,000 per hectare,
resulting in about Rs. 3,000 loss per hectare. In addition, this years’ crop was
badly attacked by pests. In Anantapur district alone, 3 lakh acres of crops were
destroyed by disease. Much of the pesticides used were ineffective due to
adulteration. Besides, the government themselves sold the banned pest-prone
JL-24 variety to farmers, in order to curry favour with the MNC manufacturers.
With the serious losses, many farmers committed suicide.
The tragedy is that as early as July the
Rekulakunta Agricultural Centre cautioned about the spread of pests. But the
hi-tech Chandrababu Naidu’s video-conferencing could not pick up the warnings.
It was only after the suicides began and much of the crop was destroyed, that he
awoke from his slumber with high-sounding pronouncements. He promised spraying
by helicopters and free distribution of Monocrotophos. But this was mere Naidu-hype,
as this pesticide is only effective till 45 days after plantation. Naidu
announced his great scheme 55 days after the plantation. Later he even tried to
withdraw this free distribution saying it was too late anyway. But the agitated
farmers seized the Monocrotophos, like taking dowry for a dead bride-groom.
AP is a big producer of tobacco and chillis. Both
crops are in severe crisis. The situation of tobacco was so bad that the state
government promulgated a ‘crop holiday’ (i.e., not to harvest the crop)
this year. Even the Single Judge of the High Court issued an order for a tobacco
crop holiday. In other words anyone growing tobacco can be arrested. And as far
as the chilli growers go, they produce nothing but tears. Already the last
years’ crop of 20 lakh tonnes is rotting in the cold storage. In the current
year the rate for low quality chillis has dropped from Rs. 1,630 per quintal to
Rs. 1,020 per quintal; and for high quality from Rs. 4,210 to Rs. 3,700. With
the earlier crop still not sold, one can well imagine what will be the fate of
the current crop.
Cotton is another widely grown crop in AP.
Successive failures have seen the maximum suicides in this area. This year they
face an even worse disaster. The bulk of the crop has been destroyed by the
yellow rot. Adulterated pesticides have no effect on the disease. Additionally,
drought conditions in some areas have added to their despair. The peasants have
to spend Rs. 8000 per acre for the crop. A yield of 5 quintals per acre is the
minimum necessary to cover costs. But, in the districts of Warangal, Nalgonda
and Medak the situation is so bad that not more than 2 quintals per acre is
expected. The situation in the more prosperous Circar districts of Guntur and
Krishna is not much better. To compound the crisis of the cotton-growing
peasantry, the government has actually reduced the quantum of bank loans to the
farmer. Earlier the farmer was given Rs. 4000 per acre (even though the cost was
Rs. 8000). Now the government has changed the category of ‘farmer’ to
‘farm sector’ which includes the food processing industries, cold storages,
etc. In other words now this Rs. 4000 is distributed amongst the entire ‘farm
sector’ thereby reducing the share of the loan to the farmer even further,
thereby pushing him deeper into the clutches of the money lender.
The position of tamarind, turmeric and black gram
is also deteriorating. Many peasants who faced losses in cotton have turned to
castor cultivation. The area under castor in the state has increased from 2.2
lakh hectares last year to as much as 3.6 lakh hectares in the current year.
Though the product this year will be 2½ lakh tonnes the prices have crashed from
Rs. 1,500 last year to Rs. 800 this year.
The state of the palm oil growers is also
precarious, due to the flood of imports. Till now the central government has
been paying remunerative prices due to a ‘market intervention’ plan. But the
plan is now due to expire. This will result in the utter ruination of the palm
growers.
But, it is not only agriculture that has been
devastated in AP as a result of the imperialist dictated economic policies; even
agro-based small scale industries are being destroyed.
The broiler producing poultry farms are on the
verge of collapse. The wholesaler, commission agent, big-business nexus is
sqeezing out the small-scale producer.
The oil mills are also facing closure. The state
government’s ruling that all cooking oil should be sold in sealed packs, has
killed most of the small-scale mill owners who are unable to spend lakhs of
rupees on packaging. The government is pretending that this is to prevent
adulteration; when in fact it is only to hand over the edible oil market to the
multinationals that have recently entered it in a big way. It also helps promote
the packaging business, which again is chiefly controlled by multinationals
State Government-MNC/World
Bank Nexus
There is a clear-cut criminal nexus between the
state government and the imperialists to promote international agri-business in
AP and thereby kill not only the farmer but also the small producer.
Reduction of subsidies and raising charges (water,
electricity, etc); promoting imperialist seeds, fertilisers, pesticides etc;
dumping of cheap imported products, etc — are all a part of selling the AP
agrarian sector to the foreign sharks. Chandrababu Naidu, as chief commission
agent of US agribusiness, has been primarily responsible for the systematic
destruction of the peasantry. Let us take a look at the steps taken by this
agent :
In 1996 he increased the water cess and in 1999 and
2000 twice increased the electricity power charges. Irrigation has been totally
neglected with most projects being starved of funds. While Naidu siphons off
hundreds of crores towards hi-tech promotion, he cannot spare even a few crores
for irrigation. Only the rich agrarian pockets get water from the big projects
while the rest of AP is parched. To cover up his willful neglect of irrigation
he has gone on a hi-tech propaganda calling on people to dig cantour pits etc.,
for better watershed management. He thereby absolves the state government from
any responsibility.
The much-hyped mini projects, like the
Galeru-Nagari, Handri-Neeva and the Velugonda projects (this was supposed to
supply water to 4.5 lakh acres in Prakasham, Nellore and Cuddapah districts),
which were inaugurated with much fanfare in 1996, has not been allotted any
funds. The old projects like Jurala, SLBC and the Telugu Ganga are getting minor
amounts. The Telugu Ganga project (which is to supply water to Chennai city and
some parts of Rayalaseema) was allocated a mere Rs. 80 crores this year, which
would not even cover the old dues of the contractors and salaries of the
employees.
As a result of this warped policy vast areas of AP
are reeling under drought; while sections of the middle and rich peasantry have
turned to borewells (also pushed by the World Bank) resulting in the depletion
of the water table.
Last year 688 mandals were declared as drought
affected, yet nominal help was given. The total amount declared as relief
measures was a mere Rs. 100 crores. The banks that were supposedly told to
reschedule (i.e., extend the time for payment) the old loans, conveniently
ignored the ‘order’ saying that they had not received instructions from the head
office. The banks merely adjusted the new loans as payment for the old dues,
thereby pushing the peasantry deeper into the clutches of the usurer.
The state of the farmers utilising borewells is
extremely insecure. Having been forced to pay massive increases in electricity
charges, the supply is erratic and the voltage fluctuating. The erratic supply
has resulted in enormous damage to the Kharif crop. Also, the fluctuation of
voltage supply has resulted in thousands of motors getting burnt out. Regular
power-cut and destruction of motors resulted in crops drying up in vast areas
resulting in nominal yields and huge losses. Yet they were forced to pay the
hiked up electricity charges and costs for purchasing new motors.
If we turn to the supply of seeds, pesticides and
fertilisers, we find that the state government has left the peasantry to the
mercy of the big companies and unscrupulous traders. This year the government’s
supply of seeds was meagre. For the kharif season 60 lakh quintals of seeds were
required. But the state government supplied a mere 20% through the state seed
development corporation and Oilfed agencies. In Anantapur district, where there
was a requirement of 14 lakh tonnes the government supplied 1.12 lakh tonnes. As
a result of agitation the government supplied a nominal 68,000 quintals extra.
If such was the situation in the plain areas, one can well image the situation
in the backward adivasi regions. Nothing was supplied to them. Taking advantage
of this situation traders supplied adulterated seeds for nearly 50,000 acres.
The worst affected were Khammam and Warangal districts. For example, the
adulterated XL-35 cotton seed resulted in extensive growth, but no flowers.
The government is intentionally not allotting funds
for the Seed Development Corporation or the Oilfed. As a result
they are unable to procure seeds. It is thereby slowly handing over all seed
procurement and distribution to private and MNC agencies. This is nothing but
knowingly pushing the peasantry into the clutches of the MNC leeches like
Monsanto, Dupont, Novortis, ITC etc., who already have a strong share in the
seed business. In fact, in the current year, the state agencies themselves began
selling seeds of the MNC companies. Even banned groundnut seed varieties, like
JL-24, MTV-6 types, were supplied to the peasantry.
Besides, the state government is taking no action
on the traders who have supplied adulterated seeds, fertilisers and pesticides.
The government pesticide’s testing centres are nominal, and these freely hand
out certificates for adulterated and banned varieties. If any happen to get
exposed, there is an immediate cover-up due to the trader-politician-MNC nexus.
While the government is threatening stiff jail terms for theft of
electricity, it turns a blind eye towards these rapacious dealers. And if by
chance, due to people’s pressure, a company is black-listed, it immediately
re-appears with a new name, with the assistance of government officials. In
fact, the adulterated product owner can be given a maximum punishment of just a
fine of Rs. 500.
Such then is the mafia style nexus between the
politicians, traders and MNC/producers. It is this combine that is minting
fortunes on the devastation of the peasantry. Now, the Naidu government plans to
systemise and increase this loot by introducing his New Agricultural Policy.
New Agricultural
Policy
In line with the Central government’s New National
Agricultural Policy the AP state government has also set forth its new policies.
Naidu’s ‘Vision 2020’ is not a product of
his brain, but a scheme of the imperialists. One well-known economist, Michael
Richardson said in 1995 that : "In the Vision 2020 only the politicians will
give promises about the future, but nothing will be done at present. This is a
good vision to cheat the masses." One part of this Vision 2020 is the
‘Green 2020’ relating to agriculture.
The Chandrababu Naidu government released a
16-point Agricultural Plan in June 1998, called the ‘Karshak Parishath.’
This plan had not yet incorporated all the World Bank directives and comprised
much of the traditional rhetoric on agrarian development. As relations with the
World Bank matured (specifically after the gigantic $0.5 billion loan, chiefly
for the rural areas), he released a 21-page second manifesto in November 1999 —
called the ‘Working Paper on Agriculture.’
In this working paper he stated that 160 lakh acres
of non-cultivable land should be handed over to corporate agencies. In the same
paper, it was stated that the state government proposed to promote commercial
crops instead of food grains, and plans to introduce heavy machinery into
agriculture.
The third manifesto, entitled ‘Agricultural
Policy’ was released in June 2000, by which time his relations with the
World Bank had been tightly cemented. In this, the government proposed to form
an Agricultural Initiation Committee and the forming of a separate
commission for the agricultural sector. It also stated that the aims proposed in
the ‘Working Paper’ should be completed before 2005.
In fact all the schemes of Naidu, were nothing but
a carbon copy of the World Bank’s ‘Economic Memorandum of India’ (dated
April 29, ’91). The main points of the Agricultural Policy laid down here were :
1) In agriculture a share should be given to
the private sector, NGOs and agricultural colleges
2) Transforming waste lands into commercial
forestry and plantations
3) Encouraging contract agriculture
4) Recognising the importance and necessity of
corporatising the agricultural sector
In AP a few more policies were added to these. They
were : (a) Allotting Rs. 100 crore for price stabilisation, (b) Establishing
research centres for the main crops, (c) the government coming into agreements
with seed and pesticide companies, (d) Giving structural loans to every farmer
in the coming five years (e) Conducting agricultural exhibitions in revenue
divisions, (f) forming peasant clubs in every village, (g) Giving importance to
watershed planning in dry areas, (h) Implementing a crop insurance policy,
taking the village as the unit, (i) Implementing the ‘Rytubandhu’ policy.
These ‘policies’ are nothing but an admixture of
populist rhetoric (not to be implemented) with a conscious plan to tie
agriculture in AP with imperialist schemes (to be implemented). Much of it is
propaganda hype of the TDP government, in which Naidu has developed an
expertise.
The list of projects have been so intriguing, that
no one really knows the particulars of some of the projects announced by the
state government and funded by the World Bank. For example, in 1998, the Naidu
government announced a project entitled the ‘Andhra Pradesh Economic
Restructuring Plan (APERP) with a gigantic budget of Rs. 3,346 crores. The
multi-purpose project was designed to develop education, primary health, roads,
nutritious food, people’s commerce, water resources for agriculture, etc. In
this huge project, the share of the World Bank was Rs. 2,172 crores. But, upto
now, no one remembers this project, nor does anyone know where the money has
actually gone and with which budgets it has got inter-mixed.
A 6% yearly increase in agricultural production is
the motto of the Vision 2020, which the TDP repeats like a mantra. The
agricultural minister says that the agrarian economy will stabilise once the
agriculturist begins exporting .... and when agricultural commodities become
competitive in the international market.
All such talk is mere nonsense. How can one expect
quality products from agriculture which, on the one hand, is devastated by
adulterated fertilisers, pesticides and seeds, and on the other, handicapped by
poor irrigation, power cuts, low voltage, floods, droughts etc. Besides, while
the AP government is cutting subsidies, the imperialist countries give their
agriculturists huge subsidies. Over and above this, the peasant in AP has to pay
out the interest on usurious loans. So, infact, framing export-oriented
agricultural policies leads only to bankruptcy of the peasantry and huge profits
for big business and the MNCs. Also, corporate agriculture will lead to the
destruction of sections of the small and even middle peasantry, transforming
them into daily labourers. It will only benefit the big landed interests.
Naidu’s Gimmicks
To deflect attention from its own responsibility,
the TDP is making much noise at Delhi pretending concern for the AP farmers. The
ruination of not only the poor (by drought, floods, etc) but now even of vast
sections of the middle and rich peasants is threatening the very existence of
the TDP vote base. With all its local gimmicks having got exposed the TDP is
trying to shift the blame onto the Centre.
But, the fact is that, not only are both in the
same government, but both have also been aggressively implementing the WTO/World
Bank dictated economic reforms, which have resulted in the present crisis of the
agriculturist in AP and the rest of the country. The noise at Delhi, and the few
sops handed over to the state by the Centre, is only subterfuge to prevent the
peasants breaking out into outright revolt. The fact that the FCI has enormously
reduced purchasing grains, and is harassing the farmer by reducing grades,
rejecting vast amounts as unfit, etc., is part of a scheme to wind up the FCI,
privatise grain distribution and handover the task to multinationals like
Cargill. Cargill has already made its entry into grain distribution in the
country. This is the essence of its present policies which Naidu knows, will
slowly unfold later.
This year the FCI opened about 124 centres, mostly
in the towns at far off distances from the producer, making transportation
inconvenient and costly. To make a sale to the FCI more inconvenient, payments
this year were made by cheque, thereby ignoring the vast sections that do not
have bank accounts. After overcoming these encumbrances, if the peasantry
finally brought his produce (covering the long distances) to its depots, the FCI
has been rejecting it as sub-standard. They introduced a series of stipulations
which are not even used in Punjab or Haryana. The peasant is then forced to sell
his produce to the rapacious trader waiting nearby — who buys it at excessively
depressed rates. For example, till end October 2000, 10.5 lakh quintals of maize
entered the market centres of Nizamabad, Warangal, Kamareddy, Khammam, Siddipet,
Karimnagar, Jammikunta and Jagitial. But the FCI bought only 59,010 quintals.
Utilising this situation the big traders paid out merely Rs. 300 per quintal to
the peasantry instead of the government rate of Rs. 445. No doubt a small cut of
this profit went to the FCI officials.
Even in paddy we see a nexus between the FCI and
the miller/trader. Even assuming the miller buys the Grade ‘A’ paddy at the MSP
rate of Rs. 540 per quintal, that means for three quintals he pays Rs. 1620. 3
quintals of paddy give about 2 quintals of rice. The cost to the miller
therefore comes to Rs. 810 per quintal. But the government is buying the rice at
Rs. 950 per quintal. So even at MSP rates the miller is making big profits of Rs.
140 per quintal. The actual profit is much higher as the millers purchase the
paddy at rates well below the MSP rate. Such then is the anti-peasant,
pro-trader policy of the FCI.
Now if we turn to the state government’s role we
see a similar treachery of the so-called Market Committees (MCs), formed with
ruling party MLAs(who were not given berths in the ministry) and their henchmen.
The MCs have the responsibility to see that the peasantry is paid the Minimum
Support Price (MSP) by the traders/millers at the market yards. But the reality
was that none of the commodities that reached the market yards — paddy,
groundnut, green gram, maize, bajra, castor — was paid for at the MSP rates. At
the market yards the traders and commission agents formed into syndicates and
fixed low prices in order to fleece the peasantry. These syndicates were then
linked up with the MCs to form a mafia, that ruthlessly robbed the peasantry.
Chandrababu Naidu’s gimmicky announcement of a Rs.
100 crore price stabilisation package, to diffuse the rising discontent of the
peasantry, was yet another fraud. Firstly, the amount is a pittance compared to
the thousands of crores of purchase reaching the market. Secondly, not a paisa
of this was released to the state government purchasing agencies, such as
Markfed, Oilfed etc. Thirdly, the peasantry could not sell at MSP rates. So,
where did this Rs. 100 crores will disappear ? Most probably, into the pockets
of the MCs, traders and other hangers on.
But this was not the only Naidu’s media-hyped
gimmick. His much propagated Kuppam Pilot Project and ‘Rytubandhu’
Plan were similar farces.
The TDP set up a Pilot Project in Kuppam of
Chittoor district (Chandrababu Naidu’s home district) — along Israel oriented
techniques. This project was propagated as a TDP model involving an expenditure
of just under Rs. 10 crores. A massive Rs. 57 lakhs was invested in each acre
that came under the model. In the three years since the model was initiated the
total produce per acre has been only Rs. 85 lakhs — just a little over the
original investment. Besides, according to some studies, the project has been
harmful to the environment, destroys the fertility of the land, is useless for
multi-season crops, creates harmful foodgrains, removes the natural nutrient
contents of the soil and destroys the self-sufficiency of the peasantry.
The other gimmick to pacify the peasantry was the
so-called ‘Rytubandhu’ or ‘farmer relief’ plan. According to this
plan, when prices in the market are unfavourable, the farmer can stock their
produce in the market yards for three months and can collect, as loan, 75% of
its value. Sounds good on paper, but the government allocated a mere Rs. 34.4
crores for this plan. Not surprisingly, this amount would be swallowed by the
market mafia, utilising fake ‘peasant’ accounts, thereby throwing the peasantry
further into dependency on the trader/usurer scum.
So, for all the TDP gimmicks, they are out to
destroy the agriculturists and hand over the agrarian economy to foreign
agri-business. This is resulting in more and more farmers taking to suicide. In
just the one month of October 2000, 45 farmers committed suicide in AP. One can
well imagine what dire straits the farming community has been pushed to, when
they destroy themselves with the pesticides meant for the insects. The tragic
conditions become even worse when they leave behind a wife, little children and
elderly parents. It is a nightmare and horror for the whole family. The
tragedy of the dead is compounded ten-fold with helplessness of the living.
And in this situation the vampire Naidu has the audacity to say that farmers are
committing suicide for the meagrely ex-gratia payment their families receive, so
that too must be stopped immediately. While Naidu spends his time allocating
crores of rupee for IT, business schools, express roads, film cities and tourism
(it allocated a huge Rs. 2,300 crores for 19 projects, to place Hyderabad on the
international tourist map), the vast agricultural population is being pushed to
as low inhuman death.
Reforms No Answer
The crisis of the green revolution and the economic
reforms in the agrarian sector have descended simultaneously onto the backs of
the AP peasantry. This has hit hard, not only the poor peasants, but also vast
numbers of middle peasants and even a section of the rich peasantry. Also, with
growth only in the hi-tech sphere and no job opportunities for the rural
populace, the burden on the land is increasing to breaking point. Oceans of
humanity migrate each year in search of jobs. A bankrupt peasantry, a devastated
populace of poor and landless peasants, and a traumatised rural population is
Naidu’s package to AP’s agrarian economy.
No stunts of the TDP nor the NGO-style reforms nor
the World Bank doles can change the situation. All these are geared only to
extend the market for commodities in the rural areas by destroying self-reliant
existence. This growing market economy, with declining purchasing power is
ruining a vast populace as never before. The only answer to the present
situation is through radical transformation, where land is redistributed to the
tiller and the peasantry is taken forward, organised into
self-sustaining-mutual-aid teams and cooperatives.
The AP peasantry has a great history of struggle
from the great Telangana uprising, to Srikakulam to the present CPI(ML)[People’s
War] organised upsurge. Suicides is no answer. The answer lies in taking up arms
to gain justice and for a new bright future.
— Oct.
2000
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