Corporate houses controlling agriculture in India: P Sainath


Corporate houses controlling agriculture in India: P Sainath

Pics: Dayanand Kukkaje
Daijiworld Media Network - Mangalore

Mangalore, Sep 8 (DHNS): With the alarming number of farmers suicide cases in the country, there is a need to rethink the idea of agriculture. For the sustainability of farmers, emphasis should be shifted from cash crop cultivation to food crop cultivation and de-link from the high-cost cultivation, said eminent Journalist and Ramon Magsaysay awardee P Sainath.

He was delivering a talk on ‘Corporate Hijack of Indian agriculture,’ at B V Kakkillaya Inspired Orations - 2013, jointly organised by Hosatu monthly, M S Krishnan Trust, Samadarshi Vedike and Abhinava at Ravindra Kalabhavana at University College on Saturday.

Explaining how the corporate world has held agriculture in its fists, he said nothing has now remained in the hands of farmers including the decision on choosing the seeds, fertilisers, water, cost of electricity, input cost and market value, whereas the power of decision making has been left in the hands of a few big corporate houses in India and abroad. “I have been demanding the government to have a ten days parliament session exclusively to discuss on agriculture and on bringing in a policy to improve the condition of farmers,” he said.


Farmers suicide

Analysing the farmers suicide cases in the country, which according to Crime Records Bureau stands at 2,85,000 since 1995, he said the data is fake, for it largely excludes several sections of farmers including women and Dalits who do not own ‘patta’ land. There has been a sharp fall in the number of farmers in the country in the last two decades. Approximately, 15 million main cultivators have quit the occupation, i.e., 2,000 fewer farmers in the country everyday. Even as there is a fall in the number of farmers, there has been a sharp increase in the number of agriculture labourers, suggesting that the farmers have lost their status and have declined into the position of agriculture labourers, due to cultivation loss.

“If Maharashtra stands first in the list of farmers suicide cases, Karnataka occupies the second position with 39,000 farmers committing suicide since 2005. It is significant to note that the farmers who have committed suicide, are cash crop cultivators and not food crop farmers. One of the dangers that neo-liberalism brought to our country is the shift in food crops to cash crops, which has resulted in greater domination of corporate houses on agriculture,” Sainath noted.

Refering to the case of vanilla disaster in the region, which incurred loss to a large number of agriculturists in Dakshina Kannada district, he said the same could repeat with coffee cultivation. With the coffee seeds largely exported to foreign countries, the market is controlled by a few corporate houses abroad. If they find a better variety in some other nation, the market value in India would go down, thus affecting the coffee growers in Karnataka and Kerala.

He also turned critical at the Food Security Bill and wondered why none of the MPs opposed it.

The Act if implemented would reduce the food grains offered to beneficiaries from the present 35 kg to 25 kg per month. There would  also be a drop in the number of beneficiaries under the food schemes, he pointed.

  

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Comment on this article

  • c n hegde, sirsi

    Sun, Sep 22 2013

    it is true.

    DisAgree [2] Agree [2] Reply Report Abuse

  • Steve, Mangalore

    Mon, Sep 09 2013

    Looks like You have totally mis-understood the theme. The corporate means, Corporates of Fertilizers, pesticides and GM see corporates.
    Also there is no Scientific Price buy back system is not there in India as most of the world countries have... which is the main cause of the Problems

    DisAgree [1] Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • Gabriel Francis ( Gabbuji), Mangalore

    Mon, Sep 09 2013

    I had the privilege of listening to eminent journalist P.Sainath in a reputed place 4 years back. Audience included students n intellectuals, a jam packed auditorium with more than 2000 listeners. After one and half hours of presentation in a pin-silence hall, interaction with the speaker followed in the form of question n answer session which went for more than two hours when organizers had to end bcz of prior commitments of P. Sainath. There was not a single dissent to what he spoke. His method of analysis and his way of conveying the reasons for suicide cases of farmers with real numerical/visual/chronological data from Vidharbha n other areas was heart-touching. He is wikipedia of farmers plight. The exploration of misery of present state of farmers affairs one has to hear from P. Sainath. Those who have some agricultural background and those who can connect with farmers wil surely had to battle with tears.

    He is not ordinary journalist. His work is vast and covers every aspect of farmers suicide in India in a specialized way. He is one of the very few journalists focusing on farmers in particular n agriculture in general. When most journalists are behind politicians or behind mega events, Sainath spends time traveling to remotest areas, documenting facts and arranging details in a silent room of his. Very simple living down to earth person if one sees through his study room. He has bare minimal needs, a great friend of framers. He spends lot of time personally visiting drought-hot areas. Painstakingly collects data. Interacts with farmer families who lost everything including several of their family members. Most of the images he showed had malnutritioned women n children. Due to lack of medical n food, many men are suffering with ailments. No drinking water. Sainath is a keen observer and deep thinker. His publishing in reputed papers like "The Hindu" made huge impacts in power corridors of Delhi n state capitals.

    DisAgree [2] Agree [5] Reply Report Abuse

  • flavian dsouza , chik/banaglore

    Mon, Sep 09 2013

    no corporates control any agriculture produce in India . ITC is one of the biggest players and doing a decent job in uplifting the poor and coming up with good ideas to educate farmers. Its the wholesale merchants who control the markets at every level in India .All pds pilferage is controlled by big merchants across India !!dont blames corporates.

    DisAgree [2] Agree [3] Reply Report Abuse

  • Shetty, Mangalore

    Sun, Sep 08 2013

    Sainath...do you have the courage to tell the same to your PAPPU friend...Your patronage will stop the next moment..

    DisAgree [8] Agree [2] Reply Report Abuse

  • R.Bhandarkar, M'lore

    Sun, Sep 08 2013

    Sir
    With due respect let me tell you,
    they control the 'Government' too...

    DisAgree [2] Agree [6] Reply Report Abuse

  • Bulsam, Mangalore

    Sun, Sep 08 2013

    The five states— Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh— account for a large (and growing) number of the suicides among farmers in the country.
    Firstly, the four of these five states are in the cotton belt region of India, and the price of cotton in real terms is a twelfth of what it was thirty years ago. Furthermore, the government removed subsidies for cotton in 1997, around the time the suicide rate among farmers began becoming apparent.
    Secondly, Indian farmers, rely heavily on the monsoon each year for their crops. If a drought occurs they are left without a harvest that year, despite having spent enormous amounts of money on inputs like fertilizer and seeds.
    The corrupt politicians do nothing about it. They pass Crores of rupees to provide water for irrigation in these regions but the dirty politicians eat up 1/3rd money and build the bunts/dams with the 2/3rd but divert the water to the industries in the vicinity for big kick backs. In the end the farmers are left with nothing significant.

    DisAgree [2] Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • Valerian Dalmaida, Mangalore/Abu Dhabi

    Sun, Sep 08 2013

    Very true. The days have come to tax agricultural income under the IT Act, 1961 with amendments done till date, giving exemption to only food crop cultivation up to certain limit of land holding. Stop all subsidies on fertilizers, Diesel, Kerosene. This will boost the economy. There is huge black money with cash crop cultivators and large land holding agriculturists in India. Introduce the voluntary disclosure of income so that this black money comes into circulation as accounted money.

    DisAgree [4] Agree [5] Reply Report Abuse

  • Khushi Kumari Gupta Singh Raizada, Mumbai

    Sun, Sep 08 2013

    This is just a starter

    DisAgree [1] Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse


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