Tens of thousands of farmers and agricultural workers marched towards the Indian parliament on Friday demanding debt waivers and higher crop prices, putting pressure on Prime Minister Narendra Modi ahead of 2019 general elections.
“We are demanding legal rights for farmers – especially for tenant farmers and women farmers with no rights,” said Kavitha Kuruganti, with the advocacy group Alliance for Sustainable & Holistic Agriculture.
“Our farmers need secure rights over land and better prices for their crop to be free from debt,” she told Reuters.
Organisers said some 80,000 farmers and farm labourers were participating in the two-day agitation that will culminate with a petition to the Indian president.
“We have three main demands. Debt waiver, maximum price for the produce and a special parliament session to discuss the crisis,” Ajit Nawale from Maharastra Kisan Sabha, one of the 200 farmer groups organising the Delhi March, told AFP news agency.
More than 300,000 Indian farmers have killed themselves in the last two decades mainly because of poor irrigation, failed crops and being unable to pay back loans.
Each year millions of small farmers suffer due to scant irrigation facilities that reduces the yield and leads farmers into a deadly cycle of debt and suicides.
Farmers from across the country have flooded by train and bus into New Delhi since Thursday to mass in the capital city’s Ramlila Grounds before marching to parliament.
Modi promised to double our income but we can’t even feed ourselves
LABO BANIGO, A FARMER FROM EASTERN ORRISA STATE
Some 50,000 marched in the eastern city of Kolkata on Wednesday.
Participants marched through central Delhi chanting slogans and holding placards emblazoned with “Down With Modi Government” and “Long Live Farmer Unity” as thousands of riot and armed policemen stood guard.
“The farmer crisis has got twice as bad in the last five years,” Sadhu Singh, a farmer from northern Punjab state known as India’s rice bowl, told AFP news agency.
“We are losing money on every grain of rice we produce,” he said.
Friday’s demonstration was the latest of several protests this year.
In March, thousands of women farmers marched into Mumbai alongside their male peers in March, demanding recognition of their rights over forest and farm land.
Campaigners said implementation of the landmark 2006 Forest Rights Act (FRA), which was meant to benefit a fifth of India’s population, has been hobbled by conflicting legislation and a lack of political will.
At the same time, states have diluted several protective clauses of the Land Acquisition Act of 2013 to speed up purchases for industry and infrastructure.
Since the laws are not effectively applied, farmers need “stronger rights to their land”, said Namita Wahi, a senior fellow at the Centre for Policy Research, a think-tank in New Delhi.
“(Farmers need) not only a title, but also use, possession, occupancy and livelihood rights,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
The rights of farmers and indigenous people
The rights of farmers and indigenous people have grabbed an unlikely spotlight in elections in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh states.
Analysts say their discontent could hurt Prime Minister Modi’s Hindu nationalist party in the upcoming state elections.
The government points to initiatives such as improved irrigation, crop insurance and electronic trading platforms as evidence it has helped rural Indians, who make up about 70 percent of the 1.3 billion population.
The right-wing prime minister has promised to double their income by 2022 but farmers say nothing has changed for them.
Labo Banigo from eastern Orrisa state said he is under huge debts after his crops failed due to back-to-back bad monsoons.
We have three main demands. Debt waiver, maximum price for the produce and a special parliament session to discuss the crisis
AJIT NAWALE FROM MAHARASTRA KISAN SABHA
“My farm is a wasteland. There is hardly 10 percent produce,” Banigo told AFP.
“Modi promised to double our income but we can’t even feed ourselves.”
Nearly 55 percent of Indians are directly or indirectly dependent on agriculture. The sector accounts for nearly 15 percent of India’s economic output.
Economist Niranjan Rajadhyaksha called for the right to property to be reinstated in the constitution.
India’s constitution of 1950 recognised the right to property as a fundamental right. But subsequent laws undermined that right, and it was scrapped in 1978.
No major political party has since made reinstatement of the right to property a campaign issue, lest they be seen as pandering to the rich, Rajadhyaksha wrote in Mint, a daily newspaper.
“Property rights are a tool of inclusion rather than exclusion,” he wrote.
“The poor have neither the legal resources nor the political heft to fight laws or administrative orders that allow the takeover of their land, (and) not enough opportunities to make a living in case they are forcibly separated from their property.”