spacer
spacer search

Search
spacer
header
Main Menu
 
Home arrow Trade Campaign arrow Dateline WTO arrow Letter to Prime Minster on farmers demands

Letter to Prime Minster on farmers demands PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 17 September 2007

Indian Coordination Committee of Farmers’ Movement:
Letter to the Prime Minister. 12th September 2007

To,
Shri Manmohan Singh
Honourable Prime Minister
Government of India, New Delhi
Subject:  Memorandum from Indian farmers to demand for a ‘livelihood support’ and    a ‘sustainable pro farmers policy’ to deal with the current agrarian crisis

Dear Sir,  
On 15th August 2006, from the ramparts of the Red Fort you had timely acknowledged the deepening agrarian crisis and increasing farmers’ suicide in India. You had said, “I see that our farmers in many parts are in a crisis, not managing to eke out a decent living from their land… The agricultural crisis that is forcing them to take the desperate step of committing suicide needs to be resolved”. Even though our economy is booming and our stock exchange sensex is skyrocketing yet more than 65% of our population who eke out their livelihood from farms and farm related activities are in deep distress. The increasing inequality has widened the gap between haves and haves-not due to the further narrowing of wealth holding in the hands of a few. Despite this the UPA government policy directions are geared towards benefiting the countable ultra rich at the cost of the poor majority, mainly the agrarian society. Several of the governments reports speaks loudly about the pathetic condition of rural community, e.g. National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector (NCEUS) said about 836 million people (77%) live on below Rs 20 per day. The NSSO (59th Round) report indicated that the average monthly per capita consumption expenditure of farm households across India was Rs. 503 in 2003. The widespread phenomenon of farmers’ suicides in almost every part of India constitutes a cruel testimony to the destitution among farmers and deepening agrarian crisis.  

The epidemic of farmers' suicide is the real barometer of the stress under which Indian agriculture and Indian farmers have been put by globalization and liberalization of agriculture. Across the country farmers are taking the desperate step of ending their life because of the new pressures building upon them as a result of globalization and corporate takeover leading to spread of capital-intensive agriculture. Indebtedness is an inevitable outcome of the corporate model of industrial agriculture. We are paying the cost of liberalization and globalization of our agriculture with lives of our brethren farmers –men and women.  

But surprisingly, the government policy level response continues to be insensitive to this reality and all efforts are being made to hide the real reasons for agrarian crisis and offer corporatization of agriculture as the solution for the agrarian distress. The UPA government under your leadership is intensely pushing for the corporate agenda for agricultural development and opening up of the agriculture sector to the corporate capital. It is being done through facilitating the corporate ownership of land by abolishing the ceiling laws and promoting special economic zones (SEZ), contract farming, private markets (APMC), retail chains, seed monopolization, monopolization of our agriculture research (through Indo-US Knowledge Deal), promotion of GMOs, excessive import of food grains (esp. wheat) to depress domestic price for facilitating corporate procurement thus furthering the dependence of farmers on the corporate sector for both procurement of inputs and marketing of output. This corporate agriculture syndrome continues to govern the policy making of your government.  

In view of the above, we urge for:  

Pro-Farmer Policy: So far the UPA government tried to deal with the agrarian crisis and farmers suicide in installments and through package deals, e.g. the Vidarbha Relief Package, which brings temporary relief to limited number of farmers and is not long-term solutions. We demand that the Central and state governments need to strengthen all the necessary conditions for subsistence farming. It must introduce comprehensive policy measures to protect land and its produce for farmers and for that purpose withdraw operations of free market access to all lands and agriculture as well as ban contract farming and other practice that affect the farmers' exclusive ownership over their land. The Government of India must immediately come up with a genuinely pro farmer policy – one that is reflective of the demands of farmers and not corporations, to stop farmers’ suicide and one that will make agriculture a viable occupation for our farmers and agricultural labour across India.  

Include Farmers in the Sixth Pay Commission: In the 6th Pay Commission, nearly 42 lakh central government employees and two crore state government employees will receive a salary bonanza that will cost the state exchequer more than Rs 100,000 crore a year. As said before, the farm income over the years has declined and there is increasing destitution among farmers. Like everyone else, farmers, too, need an adequate monthly take-home package that takes care of their family needs and leaves them with a little surplus to sow the next crop. Probably the only way to ensure the economic viability of the farm sector is to enlarge the scope of the sixth pay commission to include farmers. Based on minimum land-holdings, and de-coupled from production, there is immediate need to ensure farmers get an assured income, similar to the European Union which has introduced decoupled payments for its farmers to protect them from declining incomes. India ought to follow a similar approach and include farmers in the Sixth Pay Commission. We therefore demand for an “income support” for Indian farmers with a ‘minimum take home’ income based on their land holding size. We also support a similar approach for the millions of landless labourers who also needs income support for their survival.  

Stop Autonomous Liberalization and Keep Agriculture out of WTO: The farmers of India are concerned about the recent developments in the WTO negotiations as well as the autonomous trade liberalization in agriculture, e.g. lowering of tariff on edible oil, cotton, wheat and other commodities. The Falconer draft paper on agriculture, which is being negotiated in Geneva, ensures continuation of massive subsidies to farmers by the developed countries, but it ignores basic issues of developing countries such as special products, special safeguard mechanisms and tariff escalations. We believe that the basic agenda of the Doha round is “market access” through lowering of tariff in developing countries. India is experiencing drastic impact of removal of quantitative restrictions and internal trade liberalization in agriculture and any further lowering of tariff on agricultural goods would be disastrous for small and marginal farmers. Moreover, our agriculture is being sacrificed in return for a very miniscule gain from Doha Round as indicated by the World Bank and Carnegie Endowment for International Peace studies, which shows that the entire gain in agriculture to the 110 developing countries, including India, would be to the tune of just US $6.7 billion dollars or Rs. 35000 crores. We therefore demand that the government must immediately come out with a white paper on gains and losses from the Doha round before making any commitment at Geneva, re-introduce quantitative restriction to protect agriculture from cheap subsidized imports, stop autonomous liberalization in agriculture and increase import tariff on edible oil, cotton and wheat to at least 75% and introduce proper safeguards to protect our farmers in view of FTAs and RTAs which India is entering into. We also demand that India should insist on keeping agriculture out of the WTO.

Better Procurement Prices: For last 12 years since India has joined the WTO, the farmers are experiencing decline in domestic farm prices caused by liberalization of imports and removal of quantitative restrictions (QRs) which opened floodgates for dumping of cheap subsidized food grains from outside. With the integration of markets, the Indian farmers have also been exposed to the volatile world agriculture market which is influenced by the cheap subsidized produce from developed countries. Moreover, under the pressure from the World Bank and IMF to curtail subsidies, the UPA government is also thinking on the lines of stopping the minimum support price mechanisms, which, we believe, is an imperative for farmers’ income security. This would be a great injustice to Indian farmers if MSP is done away with. Just as no just society can allow the super exploitation through low wages, no society can allow the super exploitation of farmers through low and even negative return to farming. We therefore demand that the government must strengthen MSP mechanisms, fix the procurement price of all agricultural produce before the sowing season, increase the procurement price of all crops which should cover their cost of production and ensure procurement of all agricultural produce for which Minimum Support Price (MSP) has been announced. We also urge that no procurement or import should be allowed below that price. Tariffs and anti dumping measures must be used to ensure that artificially cheap subsidized commodities are not dumped on the Indian market leading to loss of farmers’ incomes.  

Stop Wheat Import: We are also witnessing, in last two years, a drain of our foreign exchange on importation of wheat at double the domestic price (of Rs. 1600 per quintal). The deliberate move to import wheat every year is a step to push our farmers out of farming. The implications on the nation’s food security are also grave. Imported wheat is also bringing in new weeds, pests and diseases, which will adversely affect Indian agriculture. By offering a lower Minimum Support Price (MSP) and resorting to imports to meet the buffer stock requirements, the government aims to dismantle the price and procurement mechanisms. This is also a deliberate attempt to subvert the Food Corporation of India and the Public Distribution System. Instead of importing wheat at higher price to benefit multinational grain corporations like Cargill and ITC, we demand that the government should offer a higher MSP to its farmers. A beginning should be made with an immediate announcement of an MSP of at least Rs. 1200 per quintal for wheat before the sowing begins.

Ban Commercial release of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs): Indian farmers are much concerned that despite large-scale failure of transgenic cotton (Bt. cotton) in the country, the UPA government has given permission for large scale trials of the first GM food crop in the country in the form of Bt Brinjal. Besides Brinjal, several other GM crops are also on the verge of being released for commercial cultivation. This goes against the recommendations of the National Commission on Farmers. The bias of the Genetic Engineering Approval Committee (GEAC) in favour of biotech industries is evident from the manner in which serious environmental, human and animal health issues are being ignored. Working in tandem with the companies, the GEAC is turning India into a dumping ground for untested and risky GM crops and food. We also demand a complete ban on commercial release of all GM crops and foods in the country. The decision of the GEAC is also being influenced by the Indo-US Knowledge Initiative (between India and US) which is geared towards bring in the second Green revolution in the form of “Gene Revolution” to promote production and marketing of hazardous and unsustainable genetically engineered seeds and foods. Given that Indian agriculture does not have anything in common with American farming, given that we have vast amounts of experience, knowledge and capabilities on a variety of subjects within the country, given that the Knowledge Initiative does not seem to have any benefits for Indian farmers but only negative implications, given that the current agrarian crisis facing Indian farmers needs other fundamentally different solutions, we demand that the UPA government must immediately withdraw from this deal and stops its implementation. The Movement also requests you to actively support ecological alternatives in agriculture instead of promoting GMOs and find solutions which reflect a vision for the sustainability of agriculture and of the farming livelihoods in the country.  

We are therefore hoping that you will immediately take notice of our demands and take necessary actions.  

Signed by  

Mahender Singh Tikait, President, Bhartiya Kissan Union, India
Ajmer Singh Lakhowal, State President, BKU Punjab
Jagdish Singh, State President, BKU Madhya Pradesh
Gurnam Singh, State President, BKU Haryana
Yudhvir Singh, Spokesman, Indian Coordination Committee of Farmers Movements

 
< Prev   Next >
spacer
INTERNSHIP OPENING AT FOCUS ON THE GLOBAL SOUTH, INDIA
Focus on the Global South - India is accepting applications for internships.
Click here for more details>>
Focus Video
The lastest focus video released: A world without the WTO
A new video from Focus on the Global South


 
Focus on the Global South - India

A-201, Kailash Apartments, Juhu Church Road, Juhu, Mumbai – 400 049. India

Tel: +91-22-6592 1141 / 51, Telefax: +91-22-2625 4347. Email: focusind@vsnl.net / focusind@yahoo.com

WEBSITE: http://focusweb.org/india

spacer