PUNJAB
Pattas
for Abadkar Farmers
AIKS
to Hold a 3-day Protest
S S Sekhon
THE
Punjab state
committee of the All India Kisan Sabha held a mass rally of
over 3000 farmers
and agricultural labourers from all parts of the state in Ludhiana
on December 20, 2013. The rally was
held at a historic village called Hambaran which is known for
its role in the
Gadhar movement and is a center of the Left movement today.
The participants
came at the height of the bone biting winter to announce the
farmers' and agricultural
labourers' pressing demands regarding the agrarian crisis and
the life and
death struggle of the rural masses resulting from the
shameless implementation
of anti-farmer policies by both the former Congress and the
present Akali-BJP
governments of the state. People of all ages, women and men
attended the rally
at the peak of the winter reflecting the depth of the crisis.
It is significant
that at this time the ruling Akalidal was forced to cancel its
public rally
here in which the BJP’s prime ministerial candidate Narendra
Modi was supposed
to speak. Obviously they did not have faith in their capacity
to mobilise the
peasantry behind their policies as the Left is able to do.
Addressing
the
rally, AIKS general secretary Hannan Mollah demanded a
comprehensive
legislation providing ownership for all Abadkar farmers who
had been allowed to
farm waste lands when they came over as refugees from Pakistan
in
1947, which the Akali government is now attempting to take
over in direct
contrast even to neighbouring Haryana.
He also demanded a waiver of farm loans as cultivation
was becoming more
unviable in Punjab than any
other state. To
make peasant cultivation viable, he demanded that the
government must announce
a minimum support price as suggested by renowned agricultural
scientist Dr MS
Swaminathan. He felt that one of the reasons for non viability
of cultivation
is because of the
enormous increase in
input costs including that of power for bore wells. He
demanded supply of free
power for farmers using tube wells as a source of irrigation
and also the
necessary input subsidy on diesel, seeds, fertilizers and
pesticides as well.
He criticised both the central as well as state governments
for providing undue
benefits to corporate companies at the cost of small farmers.
Referring to the
anti-farmer policies of the Narendra Modi government, which
filed a petition in
Supreme Court against the interests of Abadkar farmers, as he
wants to hand
over the land from farmers to investment zones, he demanded
the withdrawal of
this petition immediately. He referred also to his meetings
with Sikh farmers
from Kutch, their role in
developing the area
and our support for it. He also pointed out that it is
shocking that Badal was
running a government in Punjab with the help of a party
evicting Punjabi
farmers from Gujarat.
All
India
Agricultural Workers Union joint secretary Suneet Chopra
remarked how over a
period of time peasant cultivation had become non profitable
and on an average
each farmer lost Rs 1200 per acre per year. This is forcing
the farmers to sell
their land and join the mass of agricultural labourers.
According to one
estimate, 40 percent of farmers are willing to shun
cultivation provided a
suitable alternative employment is available for them. With
the large number of
farmers now joining the ranks of agricultural workers, the
average working days
available per season is reduced to a mere 38 days in a year.
This is pushing
the agricultural labour, the small and marginal farmers into
the clutches of
money lenders to sustain their daily needs. He also criticised
the Punjab government’s lax
attitude in providing 100 days
employment under MNREGA. Punjab
is one of the
states with lowest MNREGA budget utilisation. He demanded that
the state
government prepare a suitable working plan to secure 100 days
work under MNREGA
at least in the forthcoming summer season to reduce migration
of agricultural
workers from Punjab to
cities in search of a
livelihood. He also reiterated the demand for 250 days work
under MNREGA with
Rs 300 daily wage to help the vast mass of the rural poor of Punjab
to survive. He also said that in Punjab,
the
government is having under its control 30 lakhs acres of land
apart from
additional 10 lakhs acres of surplus land. He reminded the
gathering that in Punjab
there are only 15 lakhs agricultural workers and
despite 300 percent excess land under the custody of
government, it is not
ready to distribute this to agricultural workers. He stressed
the importance
both of work and the distribution of land among the landless
to resist the
uncontrolled price rise the mass of people were suffering from
for the last ten
years, stating that the anger of the people was seen in the
election in Delhi
where both the Congress and the BJP failed to be able to trap
the people in a
two party system, where both the parties were a burden on
them. He stated that
Punjab had a tradition of a powerful Left to counter both
these forces and
called on the people to develop a viable Left alternative in
the 2014 elections
in Punjab.
CPI(M)
state
secretary Charan Singh Virdi called on the gathering to build
a strong movement
and fight on till we succeed in ensuring the ownership rights
to Abadkar
farmers. He
alleged that the government
is encouraging the illegal possession to scuttle the farmers
demand for land
rights. He also called on people to support the CPI(M) party
candidate in Ludhiana
in the
forthcoming parliamentary elections. He highlighted the role
of the Left in
taking up the struggles of the peasantry like the
anti-betterment levy
movement, struggles against arbitrary taxes and cesses, and
the failure to give
adequate support to the just demands of the peasants. He
assured the gathering
that the CPI(M) would stand by them through thick and thin and
make every sacrifice
to ensure their success.
The
Punjab Kisan
Sabha secretary Sukhvinder Singh Sekhon informed the gathering
about the
sustained struggle and hunger strike of
Abadkars for more than 57 days before the office of Naib
Tehsildar at Sidhwan
Bet where Chopra was present more than once. He also informed
the gathering
that compelled by our agitation, the Punjab
chief minister agreed to appoint a three-member committee to
look into issues
of Abadkar farmers land rights. This committee consists of the
principal secretary
to the CM, the finance commissioner from the revenue
department and the
advocate general. To ensure that this committee completes its
work within the
given time frame and to keep up
the
pressure, a state level three-day state level protest action
is planned in the
end of January 2014.
Gurchetan
Singh
Bassi, the state president of the AIKS who also presided over
the rally
announced that the AIKS will gherao Punjab
vidhan sabha on their just demands. He also called upon the
gathering to make a
grand success of the martyrs conferences to commemorate the
sacrifices of
farmers during the anti-betterment levy movement. These
conferences will be
organised at the villages of Aitiana on March 5, 2014 and at
Narur on March 12,
2014.
Vijay
Mishra,
president CITU Punjab congratulated AIKS for the successful
rally and supported
the demands of Abadkars. Bhup Chand Channo, president AIAWU
also highlighted
the necessity of jointly fighting for work, land and against
the price rise to
ensure the survival of the mass of people of Punjab
which is a rural state. Ram Singh Nurpury, Bant Singh Namol,
Gurmeet Singh
Dhadha, Balbir Singh Jadla, Major Singh, Dharampal Seal, Roop
Basant Waraich,
Baldev Latala, Mukhtar Singh Jalaldiwal, Amarjit Mattu, Tarsem
Singh Bhalri, Major
Singh Bhikhi Wind, Gurnek Singh Bhanjal also spoke on this
occasion.