Indian farmer suicides touch record
INDIA: More than 100 cotton growers killed themselves in India's
richest state in August, marking the highest monthly number of suicides
in five years by farmers whose mounting crop loans drive them to death,
activists said.
The spate of suicides in the western state of Maharashtra took the
toll to more than 900 this year and the wave has not abated despite
highly publicised efforts by New Delhi to ease the financial burdens.
Debt-ridden farmers have been killing themselves in alarming numbers
in four Indian states and government statistics have recorded about
3,600 suicides in Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Kerala in
the last five years.
Maharashtra has been severely hit this year as farmers have failed to
procure loans for seed and fertilisers, and those who borrowed money to
sow cotton saw their crop destroyed by heavy rains in the past month.
Activists say the "accumulated distress" of Maharashtra's farmers is
now at its worst. "The rate of suicide now is about three per day," said
Sharad Joshi, chief of Shetkari Sangathan, a powerful farmers' lobby in
Maharashtra.
Vidarbha Jana Andolan Samiti, a farmers' pressure group, said it had
counted 110 deaths in August, making it the highest figure since 2001.
Most of India's farming community is poverty-stricken and many
farmers borrow - often amounts that would only buy a few drinks in an
upmarket London or New York pub - from the village moneylender at rates
as high as 10 percent a month.
India's economic reforms launched in the early 1990s have added to
the farmers' woes, with duties that protected them from subsidised
European and American cotton being phased out, experts say.
Their debts soar when crops fail due to poor rains or prices tumble.
"The government suppresses facts for obvious reasons, but we have
names of each and every farmer who committed suicide," Samiti head
Kishor Tiwari told Reuters.
The crisis in Maharashtra prompted Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to
visit the affected region in July.
He announced over $400 million in one-time grants, interest waivers
and debt restructuring besides a one-year moratorium on loan repayments
for farmers at the end of the tour.
But activists said the package was yet to make an impact.
"In fact, the rate of suicide has gone up by 50 percent after the
prime minister announced his package," Joshi told Reuters.
"There is no effort to get to the root of the problem. Whatever steps
are announced never percolate to the grassroots," said activist Tiwari.
Reacting to reports of a spike in farmer suicides, Prime Minister
Singh last week said it would take 2-3 months for his economic package
to show results.
MUMBAI, Sunday, Reuters |