Digambar Singh, a farmer from Bhadana,
Punjab, says Narendra Modi machinery underestimated their resolve in putting up
a brave fight against Central laws
Iss bar to aar-par ki ladai hai (It is a do or die
situation this time). Just how much can the farmer bear? Some things are better
left out of the purview of corporates. We are sons of the soil and we
understand the land and its needs much better than corporates. The land we till
is our mother, and not a profit making machine, even though we all like to earn
well.
When
I set out from Bhadana (Punjab) to reach Delhi for protest against the Central
Agriculture Laws, I was sad to see that midway in Haryana, the roads had been
dug overnight so that we couldn’t reach the protest sites. Heavy concrete barricades
had also been placed to block us. Farmers were also being badmouthed. Tear gas,
water cannons, lathicharge… but our
resolve was firm. Nothing is going to stop us this time.
The
government says the various laws are for our benefit and will open up bigger
and better markets for us. But if I am a farmer who grows his crops in Punjab,
should I go and check out the bigger, better markets in, say, Karnataka or
should I be busy sowing the crops? There is already a system in place (adhatiyas) for purchase of our crops and
the farmers have been reaping its benefits because of a guaranteed MSP.
Why
try fix a thing that isn’t broken in the first place? You may improve on the
existing processes but why do a complete overhaul and that too without proper
dialogue with the parties concerned. Farming requires groundwork but the new laws
are silent on MSP.
At
present I am at the UP Gate (Delhi-UP Ghazipur border) with fellow farmers to
register my protest and if the government is going to ignore our voice, then we
will also ignore their voice during elections. Fir satta se bahar jane ki taiyari kar lein wo (They better be
prepared to stay out of power in that case). Farmers across the country have
been committing suicide for many years now and this year the Coronavirus has wreaked
a deadly blow to our income. This is the time to protect farmers and let them
know they are valued.
The
nights here are cold, but we are well-prepared. We have brought rations to last
us for a few days and we have also brought bhattis
along to cook the food. Let’s see for how long we will need to protest. Sometimes
you have to muster up all the strength you have to survive. We are not scared
of Coronavirus even though we are taking all necessary precautions.
Our
kids have lost precious study time, as rural households don’t have easy access
to online learning. Our old parents are suffering. I hear the hospitals are in
bad shape due to the pandemic pressure. Par
jab marna hi hai to kyu na ladte mara jaye (But if we are destined to die, we
shall put up a brave fight?). If the government really wants to help farmers,
why not do it directly by strengthening the health and education systems in rural,
agrarian zones?
As farmers
from Punjab, camping at Delhi-Haryana border, continue with their protests
against three Central agriculture laws, the farming community in Haryana has
also thrown its weight behind them. To understand the position of farmers in
Haryana and Punjab, LokMarg speaks to Veerendra Singh Badkhalsa, general secretary
of Bharatiya Kisan Union, Haryana.
Badkhalsa says there is a trust deficit between farmers and the Centre. The farming community has little faith in the motive behind these new Central laws. Critical of politics behind the laws, he points out that laws brought in by Punjab Assembly have no new provision to safeguard farmers’ interest.
Bharatiya Kisan Union leader Nirdesh Choudhary, 40, has been protesting at Delhi-UP border for several days in the cold. Choudhary says farmers are willing to endure the hardship for their children’s future
A farmer’s nerves are made of steel and
the resolve firm as a stone. We don’t protest on small matters, but when we do
the government better sit up and take notice. We can bear hunger, thirst, rain,
winter nights and what have you… only to ensure that the future of our children
is secure.
After all, we go through all these while
working in the fields. Hum raton me kai
baar khet pe hi sote hain, bahut zyada thand me bhi, sadkon ki thand hamara kya
bigadegi (We often sleep in the fields to take care of our crops, at times
in the dead of winters. So, we can tolerate the cold here). I have been using
my voice to protest the three agriculture bills since November 28. I went back
home briefly to check on my family and house, and am back with renewed strength
now.
We are not scared of the police or their
batons or water cannons. I was roughed up by cops, but I take it as my contribution
to a larger cause. We have put everything at stake to let the government know
that this is not the way to treat farmers. The government thinks corporates
will bring about another revolution for the farmers, but it won’t.
We want the government to give us in writing that the MSP will be maintained or the protests can go on indefinitely. Ye kale kanoon hum nahi manne wale. The thing is we farmers have nothing to lose anymore. The farmer was anyway at the lowest rung in the profit chain and the pandemic this year has meant even lesser earnings. Maybe we fight the best when we have nothing to lose. We as farmers are not going to get bogged down this time.
It does get difficult sometimes, like I
had to take a bus to reach the spot and then had to walk a decent distance to
reach the venue because of the barricades. Sometimes you wonder about your kids
back home but then you remember the larger cause and forget the personal
issues. We have got our own dry rations to cook and eat here, and all this gets
tiring sometimes, but then we take strength from the collective spirit.
Covid looms large but we are maintaining
full social distance and taking all necessary precautions; we distribute masks
every day and ask people to carry sanitizers. We try to maintain utmost hygiene
while cooking, eating etc. However, the government needs to understand that if
we survive the pandemic we need something to survive further.
The farmer has no safety net at all, no pension, nothing to fall back on except crops, and if even that is taken up by corporates, where do we go? There are few women out here, numbering between 100- 150 and if need be more women will join the protests. Female farmers are one of the most resilient, hardworking and smart people you will come across. We are not scared of risk taking and have the capacity to make quick decisions.
Farmers have decided we will not go to
Burari site, we will go straight to Jantar Mantar. I wonder why Modiji said
that other parties are misleading us into protesting. As if we don’t have a
mind of our own. If we are smart enough to raise crops year after year that
feeds the whole country, aren’t we smart enough to make our own decisions? Kisan apne ghar se nikal aaya hai aur is
baar baatcheet poori honesty se honi
chahiye.
Iconic
moments captured on camera often express a historical event which shakes the
conscience of the civil society for all times to come. Captured in a fleeting
flash, they remain etched in public memory: the Afghan girl, Sharbat Gula, then
nameless, shot by Steve McCurry in June 1985 in a Pakistani refugee camp,
celebrated on the cover of National
Geographic; one thin man standing in defiance against a row of tanks at
Tiananmen Square in Beijing, June 1989; earlier than that, naked children
running from a napalm bomb during the Vietnam war; and Che Guevara’s dead body somewhere
in a jungle in Bolivia, shot dead by CIA mercenaries.
In
contemporary India, as thousands of farmers wait steadfastly at the
Delhi-Haryana-UP borders, deciding their next move, some images have already
captured the imagination: A dignified old Sikh farmer, totally non-violent,
with flowing white beard, in a white kurta -pyjama and jacket, being threatened
by a young, wiry cop, belligerent, aggressive and remorseless, his fingers
clenched around a rod, his body tensed up with machismo and power.
There are other iconic images too of the struggle: a young protester jumping from a trolley to a police water cannon vehicle, switching off the tap showering dirty water on a cold day on farmers, and jumping back. (He and his father have reportedly been charged now for murder)
Many
endearing moments have arrived yet again: women and men cooking in community
kitchens on the highway; women driving a convoy of tractors in protest; and farmers
giving food and water to grateful cops.
The
last image would have been appreciated by the likes of Nelson Mandela, Martin
Luther King and Mahatma Gandhi. This is because the cops, many of them children
of hardworking farmers from humble rural backgrounds, had earlier gone all out
against the peaceful protesters. They had drenched them with water, in this
cold, teargassed them, threatened them with lathis,
dug medieval war-like trenches, brought in iron barricades, sand and mud
trucks, huge cement slabs, sand bag walls, ship containers, barbed wires, and
an endless row of cops in full gear, ready to charge.
The
farmers have been protesting in Punjab and Haryana since September. November 26
was a national protest day organized jointly by farmer organisations and trade
unions against the labour laws being unilaterally enacted by the Centre despite
the economic collapse and mass unemployment of millions in the organized and
informal sector. These might include draconian provisions like hire and fire,
12 hours work, mass sackings, major changes in pro-worker acts like the Inter-state Migrant Workers
Act, Contract Workers Act, the Factories Act, the Industrial Disputes Act, etc,
and changes in wages, safety and compensation, while contractors will be calling
the shots with no regulations. These trade unions are also opposing unbridled
privatisation of the public sector, including banks, railways and airports,
whereby certain favoured industrialists of the ruling regime in Delhi are being
brazenly backed.
Significantly, there are more than 250 farmers’ organization in the All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee, and they actually joined hands with the workers on November 26 all over the country, including in West Bengal and South India. The farmers march to Delhi from Punjab and Haryana, and also other Hindi heartland states like Uttarakhand, UP and Rajasthan, however, became the epicenter of this mass uprising, and it is not going to die down so soon.
The
question is, why the government is so adamant after pushing the three farm bills
in Parliament without consensus? Why is it refusing to make the MSP a law? And
why is it so rigidly refusing to budge, to negotiate with flexibility, using
strong-arm tactics? What is that unsurmountable, one-dimensional pressure on
the Narendra Modi regime that it is ready to alienate farmers, while choosing
to block, barricade and brutalise them?
“The
BJP government is toeing the line of corporate cronies,” said Vijoo Krishnan, speaking
to Lokmarg. He is a top leader of the Left-led All India Kisan Sabha, which led
the massive long march of farmers to Mumbai. “The intention of this government
is total corporatization of Indian agriculture. But the resistance is
unprecedented. Except for the BJP and RSS unions, all other workers and farmers’
unions have joined this resistance. Even state governments like Punjab and
Rajasthan are exercising their federal rights in support of the farmers. Kerala
has declared MSP for 16 agricultural products, and has protected the farmers
during and after the lockdown. Besides, it is providing food to 90 lakh people,
including ‘guest workers’ (migrant workers).”
Farmer
leader J Hooda from Shamli, Western UP, speaking to Lokmarg at the UP-Delhi
barricades, said: “The farmers have always known their sinister motives – to
sell our land and agriculture to corporates. Modi is doing precisely that to
favour his favourite industrialists. Now the farmers are not going to relent.
Drop the farm bills. Make a new law on MSP.”
Hooda
says the farmer makes huge losses in the open market, because it is based on market
whims, unscrupulous private players and demand and supply ratio. Often, distress
sale becomes a norm. Without government support in states, or a central MSP, farmers
will be doomed. “They want to abolish local mandis. So where will we go to sell
our produce – can we compete in the international market with massive,
mechanized farming and huge multinational farmer lobbies? Why are they pushing
us into the hands of unethical corporates who are now trying to capture Indian
agriculture through the backdoor backed by the BJP regime?”
Indeed,
while Punjab and Haryana (with UP and MP) are the biggest producers of rice and
wheat, there are 23 crops, including cereals, pulses, commercial crops, on the
list. India is 80 per cent agriculture – the food chain begins at the land of
the tiller and ends long distances in metros and small towns. In this complex
and long chain, thousands of people are involved: farmers, entire families,
landless farmers and sharecroppers, small and middle farmers, local services
and ancillary networks, small markets, shopkeepers, loaders, truckers, workers,
mandis, mills and factories, small scale and big industries, and others. It’s
corporate and government propaganda that only 6 per cent of rich farmers are
benefitting from MSP. What about the millions integrated to the entire process
till the food reaches your table? ask farmers.
Argues Vijoo Krishnan: “MSP ensures at least that much for
farmers if public procurement is there. In states where there is no effective
public procurement, farmers get paid even below the MSP. For instance, while the
MSP of paddy is around Rs 1860 per quintal in Bihar, Odisha etc, farmers are
forced to sell at Rs 1000-1200 per quintal.”
Farmers are also arguing that even the MSP, based on state
averages, is arbitrary. Kerala pays many times more per quintal for paddy, and
the crop produce costs vary from state to state. But the government refuses to
usher in serious policy changes for large scale benefits to the vast rural
sector, even while pampering and subsidising big industrialists and waiving off
their debts etc, while facilitating lucrative contracts for them, like the
privatisation of airports and railways, or the Rafael deal.
Farmer
are angry that the government is shy on implementing the comprehensive Swaminathan
Commission recommendations, including the guarantee of 50 per cent more than
the stated MSP, among other reforms, like compensating for land, labour, seed,
pesticides, fertilisers, diesel, electricity, water, tractors, machines, and
other things needed for agriculture. They are asking why the government has not
returned the GST to them on all the additional things they have used for
agriculture.
Indian
economy is in crisis because crony capitalism by profit sharks have ravaged it with
no signs of recovery during the pandemic. Now they are greedily eyeing the
post-independence public sector and agriculture. If the farmers are driven to
the edge, for the benefit of favoured industrialists and powerful MNCs, then
there is no option left for them but to fight back. That is why, as of now, it
is a do or die struggle for the thousands of defiant and non-violent farmers,
now steadfast at the borders of the capital of India.
LokMarg speaks to Gurvinder
Singh Koom Kalan, state secretary of Bharatiya Kisan Union (Lakhowal) to
know about the impact of Punjab Assembly legislations to nullify Central Agriculture
laws. Singh says while it was an unprecedented move when these state bills were
passed by near-unanimous voting in the legislative assembly, there are several
shortcomings in them.
Foremost, the farmers were demanding MSPs to be
ensured for all crops, be it mustard, lentils or cotton, and the state
government has only included wheat and paddy crops in their laws. For these and
other reasons, Singh says farmers will continue their protest against “black
laws” to adversely affect farmers.
In his second interaction with LokMarg. Dr Darshan Pal, president of the Krantikari
Kisan Union, speaks about the achievements of a sustained protests against
Central agriculture laws by Punjab farmers over last two weeks. Dr Pal believes
Punjab as a whole, including the legislative assembly, has steadfastly stood
against the anti-farmers laws by the Centre.
While detailing out the future course of action, he also
predicts political repercussions for the National Democratic Alliance at the forthcoming
elections in Bihar.
As farmers in Punjab and Haryana continue their
protests against the recently enacted Agriculture bills, LokMarg speaks to
Swaraj India leader Rajiv Godara on why their organization is supporting the farmers’
demands.
Godara says the very fact that there were no debates, nor
any discussions with farmer organisations before tabling this bills raises
questions on the intention of the BJP-led Centre. He believes, the Centre wants
to destroy mandi system and create
new markets. “The day kisanmandis fails, the MSP will also be inevitably
fail,” Godara told LokMarg. The NDA government plans to send the farmers off the
field, and put corporates in their place. These laws will make farmers puppets
in the hands of big businessmen, he says.
Dr Shantanu Dey Roy, Asst Professor in TERI School of Advanced
Studies, tells LokMarg the inherent flaws and lacunae in the recently-enacted Central
Agricultural Bills. Dr Roy says while these laws will be detrimental to the
consumer, due to price manipulation, they will be ineffective in raising the
income of the farmers. For, using this bill, big corporations can enter into
the production network, and dictate the production process. Thus food security
can be compromised.
Dr Roy points out that the main problem facing our
farmers today is high input cost and low returns, rending agriculture unprofitable.
Thus, the need is to fix a minimum price for various crops to turn farming into
a profitable venture. These bills do little to address this problem. As far as
the Centre’s claims about wiping out middlemen from the process are concerned, these
are nothing but wishful thinking, he says.
Updesh Yadav, president of Navin Mandi Sthal (farm
produce wholesale market) in Uttar Pradesh, explains how traditional mandi system works across the country.
According to Yadav, these mandis boost
competition and benefit the farmers by fetching them the due price of their
produce.
Yadav told LokMarg that the newly-enacted Agriculture bills
in Parliament will not only prove detrimental to the country’s farmers but also
wipe out a large number of wholesalers.
Farmers across the country are protesting against the
newly enacted Agriculture Bills. The Centre calls these laws key to reforms in
the agriculture sector to benefit farmers, the protests continue to spread. There
is fear among farmers that these laws will make them dependent on corporate
houses mercy.
To understand the contentious provisions under the new
law and the previous farm produce procurement system, LokMarg speaks to Dr
Darshanpal Singh, a noted agriculturist and farmer leader from Punjab.
Dr Singh explains how farmers will be affected by the new laws and their grievances, as well the measures needed to support the farmer. Watch this interview here:
We use cookies to give you the best online experience. By agreeing you accept the use of cookies in accordance with our cookie policy.
When you visit any web site, it may store or retrieve information on your browser, mostly in the form of cookies. Control your personal Cookie Services here.
These cookies are essential in order to enable you to move around the website and use its features. Without these cookies basic services cannot be provided.
Cookie generated by applications based on the PHP language. This is a general purpose identifier used to maintain user session variables. It is normally a random generated number, how it is used can be specific to the site, but a good example is maintaining a logged-in status for a user between pages.
In order to use this website we use the following technically required cookies
wordpress_test_cookie
wordpress_logged_in_
wordpress_sec
These cookies allow the website to remember choices you make (such as your user name, language or the region you are in) and provide enhanced, more personal features. These cookies can also be used to remember changes you have made to text size, fonts and other parts of web pages that you can customize. They may also be used to provide services you have asked for such as watching a video or commenting on a blog. The information these cookies collect may be anonymized and they cannot track your browsing activity on other websites.
Cookie associated with sites using CloudFlare, used to speed up page load times. According to CloudFlare it is used to override any security restrictions based on the IP address the visitor is coming from. It does not contain any user identification information.
Cookie associated with sites using CloudFlare, used to identify trusted web traffic.
__cfruid
These cookies collect information about how visitors use a website, for instance which pages visitors go to most often, and if they get error messages from web pages. These cookies don’t collect information that identifies a visitor. All information these cookies collect is aggregated and therefore anonymous. It is only used to improve how a website works.
This cookie name is associated with Google Universal Analytics - which is a significant update to Google's more commonly used analytics service. This cookie is used to distinguish unique users by assigning a randomly generated number as a client identifier. It is included in each page request in a site and used to calculate visitor, session and campaign data for the sites analytics reports. By default it is set to expire after 2 years, although this is customisable by website owners.
This cookie name is associated with Google Universal Analytics, according to documentation it is used to throttle the request rate - limiting the collection of data on high traffic sites. It expires after 10 minutes.
This cookie is installed by Google Analytics. The cookie is used to store information of how visitors use a website and helps in creating an analytics report of how the website is doing. The data collected including the number visitors, the source where they have come from, and the pages visited in an anonymous form.
These cookies are used by Youtube, Google, Twitter, and Facebook to deliver adverts that are relevant to you and your interests. They are also used to limit the number of times you see an advertisement as well as help measure the effectiveness of the advertising campaign.
This cookie is usually associated with the ShareThis social sharing widget placed in a site to enable sharing of content across various social networks. It counts clicks and shares of a page.