Farmers March to Mumbai’s Azad Maidan for Land Rights, Drought Relief

Magsaysay award winner Dr Rajendra Singh was among the marchers. He blamed the government for the drought, which he termed as ‘man-made’.

Mumbai: Thousands of farmers demanding compensation for drought and transfer of forest rights to tribals Thursday, November 22, reached Azad Maidan in south Mumbai, eight months after a similar protest was held at the venue.

The farmers and tribals who began the two-day march from Thane to Mumbai on Wednesday had halted for the night at the Somaiyya Ground in Mumbai’s Sion area, from where they began marching to Azad Maidan Thursday morning.

The morcha traversed through Dadar and the JJ flyover before reaching the Maidan, adjacent to the Mumbai municipal corporation headquarters.

Also read: Over One Lakh Farmers and Workers Are Marching in Delhi. Here’s Why.

Magsaysay award winner Dr Rajendra Singh, also known as Waterman of India, was among the marchers. He blamed the government for drought, which he termed as “man-made”.

Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis has invited the morcha leaders for talks Thursday afternoon at the Vidhan Bhawan, where the winter session of the state legislature in underway, a leader of the march said.

The participants are mostly from Thane, Bhusawal and Marathwada regions, he said.

A large number of farmers and tribals take part in a protest rally in Mumbai. Credit: PTI

The farmers are demanding implementation of the Swaminathan Committee report, which suggested that farmers must have assured access and control over resources such as land and water. They are also demanding an increase in the minimum support price and a judicial system to ensure its implementation.

The farmers, struggling to cope with the agrarian crisis, are demanding proper implementation of the loan waiver package announced by the BJP-led government in the state last year, land rights for farmers and compensation for farm labourers.

Also read: Here’s Why Farmers Across India Have Been – and Are Still – Protesting

“We have been consistently asking the state government to fulfil our long-standing demands, but the response has been lukewarm. We are forced to launch this agitation,” said Pratibha Shinde, general secretary of Lok Sangharsh Morcha, which is organising the protest.

In March, thousands of farmers, led by the Left-affiliated All India Kisan Sabha, took out a 180-km long march from Nashik to Mumbai in March to press for their demands.

That protest saw a sea of red, formed by farmers in red caps, converge in Mumbai from across Maharashtra.

(PTI)

Farmers Begin Another March to Mumbai as Demands Remain Unfulfilled

The protest comes in the backdrop of the drought that has hit more than half of Maharashtra.

New Delhi: Over 20,000 farmers are participating in a two-day march which began in Thane and will culminate in Mumbai’s Azad maidan on Thursday, NDTV reported. The agitation will continue in the island city’s maidan till the demands of the protesting farmers are met, according to a report in The Week.

The key demands of the farmers are the fulfilment of the promises that were made by chief minster Devendra Fadnavis after the long march from Nasik to Mumbai in March this year.

“We have been consistently asking the state government to fulfil our long-standing demands, but the response has been lukewarm. We are forced to launch this agitation,” Pratibha Shinde, Lok Sangharsh Morcha general secretary which has organised the protest, told India Today.

The demands that remain unfulfilled are a complete loan-waiver, land rights to the tillers, compensation for crop loss, minimum support prices at cost plus 50%.

As The Wire reported in October, the Maharashtra government’s promise of recognising forest right claims and swift implementation of the Forest Rights Act has not been fulfilled. It was found that, ironically, after the Maharashtra government’s assurances, the average land area recognised for forest dwellers actually came down.

Judicial mechanism to ensure payment of MSP

When the Centre announced MSP this year, it claimed that it had met the demand of farmers and set MSP at cost plus 50%. However, as The Wire has pointed out at the time, the government’s claim was misleading. It had chosen the lower of two costs and set MSP at higher than a 50% return over that cost. The MSPs that were set were thus substantially lower than what farmers had demanded.

But, as The Wire has recently reported, even the MSPs that have been set by the government are not being realised by the farmers. The market price for 10 of the 14 kharif crops were lower than the MSP for October. The average price for moong was 25% lower than the MSP.

Also read: Farmers March to Express No Confidence in Govt, Stopped a Kilometre From Parliament

The average price for five crops was not only lower than this year’s MSP, but also lower than the MSP that had been set last season.

The total loss calculated as price realised minus MSP, was Rs 1,003 crores in October.

Now, the farmers are demanding that a judicial mechanism be set up to ensure that farmers get whatever MSP is announced by the government. “The farmers are getting less than the MSP for their produce and there is no place where they can complain about it. So, there is a need to have a judicial system to keep check on whether the farmers are getting the MSP,” Shinde told The Indian Express.

Drought compensation

Maharashtra is reeling from a severe drought. Of the 350 tehsils in the state, 180 have been declared drought hit. A hundred and thirty-six tehsils recorded more than 30% deficient rainfall, with 27 tehsils having recorded more than 50% deficient rainfall this monsoon.

Most of these tehsils are in the Vidarbha and Marathwada regions, which have been experiencing scanty rainfall for several seasons. They are also notorious for high rates of farmer suicide.

According to reports, 618 farmers committed suicide in Marathwada between January and September this year. More than 26,000 farmers have committed suicide in Maharashtra between 2001 and 2017.

Also read: Why Tens of Thousands of Maharashtra’s Farmers Are Marching Their Way to Mumbai

For the last two years, the government has shied away from officially publishing the data for the number of farmer suicides in the country.

The drought in Maharashtra is worsening again this year. The Indian Express reported on Wednesday that residents have been forced to migrate to other locations due to the acute shortage of water.

The severe shortage has, for many, ruled out the possibility of sowing in the rabi season and are now migrating in search of economic opportunities elsewhere. Rabi sowing has hit an all time low in the drought hit districts.

The protesting farmers on their way to Mumbai are also demanding drought compensation of Rs 50,000 per acre for non-irrigated lands and Rs 1,00,000 for irrigated lands.

Support for farmers

Political parties including the AAP, CPM and the Congress party have extended support for the farmers.

The All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee (AIKSCC) – a coalition of about 200 farmers’ organisations from across India – has also extended support.

“Unfortunately, I wont be able to go to the protest. But the Lok Sangharsh Morcha is very much part of AIKSCC,” Yogendra Yadav, one of the convenors of the AIKSCC, told The Wire.