People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII
No. 22 June 01, 2003 |
IN
a joint statement issued on May 26, the All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) and the All
India Agricultural Workers Union (AIAWU) said they are disturbed at the
way the resignation of the minister for agriculture is being treated as part of
a “cabinet reshuffle.”
The two
organisations said the former minister is on record that he resigned from office
because of the central government’s anti-peasant policies. Ever since the
Vajpayee government began its pro-US agrarian demarche by starting to open up
our agrarian market in 1999-2000 with a bilateral agreement, millions of farmers
and peasants have been ruined and thousands were forced to commit suicide.
The
causes of this distress have been the uncertain and declining prices of agrarian
products like sugarcane, cotton, oilseeds, tea and coconut, partly because of
the liberalised imports and partly because of the fly-by-night seed operators
who are selling spurious products as the government is no longer is the main
source of seed distribution. To add to it, the reduction of government
expenditure on agriculture has led to a rise in the prices of electricity and
fertilisers as well as a decline in the maintenance of irrigation projects and a
complete failure of the centre’s procurement policy, leaving the peasants and
farmers at the mercy of wholesalers. Agricultural labourers, who constitute a
big chunk of the rural population, find no work because of the open import of
agricultural machinery. They are also unable to buy rations at the prohibitory
prices at which the grains are being sold today. There is widespread ruin and
starvation in rural areas.
The
AIKS and AIAWU have also charged that the BJP-led government at the centre has
refused even to meet the serious challenge posed by the almost countrywide
drought that affects vast areas even now. The estimated requirement of Rs 35,000
crore was met with an allocation of only Rs 2,000 crore, reflecting the BJP’s
callous neglect of peasants and agricultural labourers.
To these two organisations, the resignation of the minister for agriculture and his complaints about the neglect of the farm sector must be seen in the light of the fact that 91 per cent of India’s peasants own less than four hectares of land and 59 per cent of them own less than one hectare. That is why they cannot survive without government support. Thus the government’s retreat from this crucial sector is even more dangerous today. For the bulk of our armed forces come from the peasantry and cannot be expected to ignore the plight of their families while defending the borders.
The
two organisations have therefore demanded that the BJP-led government at the
centre must open its eyes to how dangerous its pro-US policies are to the
survival of our people and the security of our country. It must immediately
reverse this policy, double the allocations for drought relief in May, June and
July as directed by the Supreme Court, reopen the Barauni fertiliser factory,
change the auction procedure for tea, raise duties sufficiently to protect our
agricultural products, provide cheap electricity and sufficient irrigation
facilities for the peasantry, and increase the procurement rates especially for
sugarcane while punishing the recalcitrant mill owners who owe the cane growers
crores of rupees despite availing government loans for the purpose. As regards
agricultural labourers, a comprehensive central legislation is absolutely
necessary, as is a 122-day employment guarantee and a properly functioning
public distribution system (PDS) with the present prices reduced by half.
The
AIKS and AIAWU have warned that the BJP-led government must change its policies
or it would face the anger of the peasantry. the
resignation of the minister of agriculture is a foretaste of this. It is a
timely warning that the central government can ignore only at its peril. (INN)