Asali Kisan cannot be Free to Participate in Dharna
Thursday, December 31, 2020
Monday, December 28, 2020
Farcical agitation is bound to fizzle out on its own
The so-called farmers’ movement that is going at Singhu border of Delhi is a total farce. It has neither farmers nor any element of agitation. It looks like a picnic organised by some wealthy and rich forces, which are out to make a hay while the sun shines. The other day while watching a TV channel, whose anchor is a rabid anti- Modi, one is amazed to find that the agitation is nothing but a big hoax. The anchor was trying to show that farmers would not move from the site till all three farm laws were abrogated, although he was unwittingly exposing the puppet farmers and their handlers. He interviewed some of them, who claimed to be farmers. Some of them were old, some were young but most of them were labourers, who were brought from various districts of Punjab.
During his reporting, he asked some of them to show how much preparation has been done by them to sustain the protest. Then the anchor asked his cameraman to pan the Gym, where the elaborate arrangements for foot massages have been made. Physiotherapy facility is available at the place of the protest. Doctors are in attendance. There is no dearth of bottled water in the campsite. There are two or three stores have been set up, where plenty of warmers are available, anybody could come and take anything of his or her choice. There is one gentleman on the other corner of the place of dharna who is tattooing mainly to the youngsters. Comfortable beds and heaters under the carpeted tents have been installed to make the winter enjoyable. These conveniences are available absolutely free of cost.
Modern and automatic roti-making machines have been put up in the kitchen. A lot of vegetables, gas cylinders are lying in the corner. Those willing to have the taste of chats and golegappas can get them as much as their palate needs. Some people are engaged in working in the kitchen. It is being said that there is a one- or two-kilometres long line of tractors with trolleys, which are laden with all essentials like flours, vegetable, mustard oil, ghee and spices etc. Last month when they were marching towards Delhi, their Godfathers were claiming that they were prepared for a long haul to sit on dharna, which is no less than a picnic for the participants. There are many of them who are very candidly saying that they have been getting support from NRIs, this speaks of the interests of supporters of the agitation in creating trouble for the government.
There is not even an iota of doubt that the so-called protest to Fam laws is manipulated and orchestrated one. Some frustrated people and politicians in Delhi and elsewhere are extending their support to this counterfeit agitation because of their impotence and effeteness as they know that cannot start any agitation of their own. So, they think that it is better to hide behind this fake agitation.
The so-called Kisan leaders have not been able to convince anybody with the drawbacks, demerits, or shortcomings of the Farm laws. Whenever it is asked why the Farm laws should be repealed, they will speak like a tutored parrot that these laws are against the interests of farmers but how and in what way- then they have no reply. It will be irony and a big joke for the parliamentary form of the government if the laws, which have been enacted by the Parliament after threadbare consideration by the various committees are repealed. This will not only send a bad message to people but also be a big joke with them.
It is also clear from the various reports in the newspaper and visuals of the Television channels that 95 per cent of the crowd assembled at the protest the site has nothing to do with this spurious agitation. This is all being managed by the agents, middlemen and intermediaries. Therefore, they should be dealt with an iron hand for the larger benefit of the public and the peasantry.
Sunday, December 20, 2020
Government's Ambivalent Population Policy is Disappointing
By Parmanand Pandey
The affidavit filed by the Union Government in the Supreme- Court in response to a petition filed by an Advocate Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay that it cannot adopt the policy of coercion in family planning by implementing two-child norm has been disappointing, to say the least. The logic of the government is that the Total Fertility Rate (TFR) is declining, and any coercion will be counterproductive is fallacious logic. It is difficult to understand how the two-child norm policy will amount to coercion?
The burgeoning population of the country has created innumerable problems for the country. The land-area is fast shrinking because houses, factories, offices, hospitals, schools, colleges, institutes, roads, and other infrastructures need to be built to meet the requirements. The population, on the other hand, is not stabilising. It is increasing with every passing year.
There are many people, who consider it their duty to defy the population control policy. They say that if God has given us one stomach, then 'He' has given two hands, two legs and other organs to work and feed the family. So, they do not believe in family planning. There is an apocryphal story that when Benazir Bhutto was the Prime Minister of Pakistan, a journalist asked about her views on population control, which she vigorously supported. But when asked whether she ever used contraceptives, she put her fingers on the mouth and told the lady journalist that if she replied in affirmative, Mullas would bay for her blood. Here in India also most of the Islamists consider it as an insult to their religion if they adopt the two-child norm policy. However, to be fair, the educated section of the Muslim community has realised the importance of the two-child norm.
National Population Policy was adopted some twenty years ago but it is still a voluntary programme. The government appears to be living in the constant fear of the emergency days forgetting the fact it was because of the family programme of the emergency that the population of India is still 135 crores otherwise; by now it would have been at least one and half times more than China, which is at least two times bigger in area than India.
The Government’s affidavit has also forgotten what the Prime Minister said in his Independence Day speech last year that ‘those who choose to have small families contribute to the development of the nation and that it was a form of patriotism’. If it is an act of patriotism, why no population policy is framed to keep it under check?
India is one of the first few countries of the world which adopted the family planning programme, but it has never been given the force of the law. There is, no doubt, that there is a serious shortcoming in the two-child norm policy in a patriarchal society like India, where the desire for sons is so overpowering that people hardly have any regret in going for female foeticide. But this social problem must be handled by social awakening as well by strict implementation of laws.
I was appalled to find some people, who claimed to be very God-fearing and cannot even think of even killing a rat, but they took recourse to female foeticides many times over in their insatiable desire of getting a son. Strangely, they never regretted their criminal acts.
Therefore, a two-pronged strategy has to be adopted (a) persuasion along with (b) legal persecution for effectively controlling the population of the country.
Saturday, December 19, 2020
Not Farmers but Middlemen are Fidgety with Farm laws
Parmanand Pandey
There is no limit of perversion among Dalals and intermediaries, who have been misleading a section of farmers from Punjab to continue their siege of the Singhu border at Delhi-Haryana border in this biting cold despite the assurances from the government to discuss all issues of the farmers. The problem is not with farmers as they have not joined the so-called agitation, it is being orchestrated by the forces, which have nothing to do with farmers but they want to keep the issue simmering for their own interests. They have no sympathy for the farmers either otherwise; they would have educated them about the deleterious effects of paddy stubble burning, overuse of chemical fertilisers and pesticides and for changing patterns of crops to save the depleting water table.
These three farm laws are revolutionary by any stretch of consideration. Only brokers and self-styled Kisan leaders are opposed to it because they have nothing to do with agriculture. They are the exploiters of farmers. As a matter fact, Mandis should have been dispensed with long back in the interests of farmers but they continued to remain as the tools of exploitation mainly due to rogue politicians.
The government is also shirking its responsibility, otherwise, it should have swung into action by now to politely ask them to clear the roads by using the bare minimum force. No government worth its name could afford to allow the Shaheen Baugh model of protests in any part of the country causing huge inconveniences to a large section of society for days and weeks together. Selfish politicians and intermediaries claiming themselves as the Kisan leaders should have been sternly dealt with for the sake of real farmers and the general public.
These fork-tongued leaders have not been able to point out even one demerit in these farm laws, which should have been brought in half a century ago and then by now, the agriculture would have been free from the unbearable burden that it has on itself and it would be more remunerative as well.
In fact, if the government wants the peasants and other farmers to make them strong and self-reliant it will have to do away also with MSP. Why should others be given the responsibility of deciding the prices of our (farmers) products? Nobody wants that the prices of the products of a detergent company, a biscuit company, a textile company or a furniture company should be decided by any outsiders, then why the prices of the farmers' products should be asked to fix them by any outside agency? The crux of MS Swaminathan’s Committee report is that the farmers must get the value of their products, at least one and half times more than their inputs but that is not possible without open competition.
At present, the farmers do not have much retention capacity, they sell their products at throwaway prices when there is a glut of their products. This retention capacity can be increased only by making them strong by devising the crop insurance and freeing them from the trap of Mandis and MSPs. It is good that the Prime Minister himself has made it clear the Mandis and MSPs will be retained but they will have to be competitive because the farmers will then be free to sell their products to anyone, who offers more prices to their products. This is yet another reason for their being fidgety.
Friday, December 18, 2020
Hemant Tiwari's Description Brought Memories Alive
My good friend Hemant Tiwari, a senior journalist, a well-versed communicator and a convincing debater on many TV channels, has written a brief but a very touching post on his Facebook about his recent a whirlwind visit to his Nanihal (maternal home), near Singramau in Jaunpur district. His Nanihal is situated on the banks of river Gomti, so is my own Nanihal, which incidentally is also situated on the banks of river Gomti in Pratapgarh district. Most of us have been inculcated with faith that all perennial rivers are pious and they are like the Ganges and that is the reason that they are revered and worshipped. A famous pilgrimage ‘Dhopap’ is also situated on the banks of Gomti and when I visited this place in my childhood on my way to Nanihal, I was told that 'whosoever has bathed even once in Dhopap his/her all sins are washed away'. As they say that ‘faith can move mountains’, people throng to wash their sins in the sacred river of Gomati at Dhopap. It is an altogether different matter that it has become a highly contaminated river at Lucknow because of the callousness of the people and the administration.
However, what I wanted to say is that only three-paragraph word-sketch by Hemant Tiwari has been so powerful that it has made many like us to be nostalgic about our childhood. I would like to associate with him on the issue of rice-eating (bhaat as we say colloquially). One of my two sisters was married to an area, which is known for rice production and the eldest sister was married to a place which was situated on the riverbank, where rice was considered to be a luxury. My both sisters were eldest among all our siblings. Things have now completely changed as the rice and the wheat is produced in equal measures, thanks to the new varieties of wheat, paddy and the new technology.
Increased production of wheat and paddy has, however, driven away the coarse grains like Sanwa, Kodon and Bajra (all are roughly translated as millets of different types). My mother herself preferred to eat Bhaat of Makka (maize or corn) to rice. I also love to eat these coarse grains in many ways. The crops of these grains have fast disappeared because their yield is much less than those of wheat and paddy. Now, these are sown in a very limited area as they are necessary for certain purposes. Even barley is not sown in our area because of the low yield and lesser remuneration.
Hemant is bang on the head in his description of the scene of Bidai from Nanihal. Every Bhanja, Bhanji, Nati or Natin was entitled to get something from Nani or Mami. It could be from a few Annas to a few rupees some four or five decades ago but they were no less than treasures. A Bhanja or Nati was invariably excused for his mischiefs in Nanihal because nobody could punish him. It was generally believed that 'anybody who beats or slaps his Nati or Bhanja will suffer at the old age as his hands will tremble or shiver. This was one of the reasons that boys were not allowed to live for longer periods in Nanihal because chances of their being undisciplined were more as compared to their father’s house.
This is equally true that most boys used to learn many good lessons from their Nana, Nani, Mama and Mami. These lessons helped to grow in life. Guardians in Nanihal were more concerned about the future and well being of their wards. I have seen umpteen number of people who have done much better in their lives as they lived for more time in their Nanihals.
Technology and the mode of communication and transportation has completely changed life everywhere, be it rural or urban areas. The intensity of relations has also vanished. However, it is always soothing and sweet to remember the old memories. I have requested Hemant to write a regional (aanchlik) novelette on this theme. It may not be very relevant for today, but that will certainly help others to revive the memories and the new generation can learn a lot about the situation that was prevailing some half a century ago particularly in eastern Uttar Pradesh.
Tuesday, December 15, 2020
Repealing of Farm Laws means dumping of peasants
Any government worth
name will be failing in its duty if it concedes to highly irrational and
unjustified demands of some motivated persons masquerading as farmers for
repealing of the farm laws. A so-called Kisan leader is seen to be speaking on
some TV news channels that ‘why the government has gifted us something which we
never demanded?’ Will anybody tell him
that any government is mandated to take make such laws are in the interests of
the people?
Does a government which
have been elected by the overwhelming majority by the people can afford to
ignore them and listen only to those who are out to create anarchy by sheer
dint of the resources that they have? The government is expected to work for
the vast peasantry of the country while enacting the farm laws, which has been
left ignored by the successive governments after independence. As a result of it,
the condition of small farmers has not improved. Even farmers with good land
holdings have got reduced to penury and have been cursed to live in the debt
trap because of the faulty farm policies.
Anybody having any
concerns for the peasants will not lose sight of the facts that there have been
regular demands for introducing fresh farm laws. If the old laws were so good,
then how and why did hundreds of farmers commit suicides every year? The
increasing number of suicides bear testimony that the interests of farmers
were never seriously considered by the powers that be.
Mandis must go lock, stock and barrel because they
hardly serve any purpose of the farmers, only the brokers and intermediaries
are benefitted by them (Mandis). These aarhatiyas and brokers do not think of
the society otherwise, they would never have abdicated their responsibility of
educating and convincing the Punjab farmers for not burning the paddy stubbles
in their fields. These farmers also need to be told to switch over to some
other crops to save the deteriorating health of the soil and preserve the
fast-depleting water tables.
Those who are doing
politics in the name of farmers are their real enemies. Their strings are being
pulled from somewhere else. There is no need to pay any heed to the
eternally frustrated intellectuals and selfish journalists because they will
damn you, when you do something but will also damn when you do not do anything.
Therefore, they should best be ignored.
There is no doubt that disputes must
be resolved through talks and negotiations, but the question is talking with
whom? Those who are assembled at Singhu border of Haryana and Delhi are neither
kisans nor their representatives. They are motivated to the brim and no amount
of negotiations will convince them. Even in a factory or a company, there are
some Union representatives with whom the managements negotiate but here there
is no representative who can convince others. Hence, the government will have
to handle the issue in the as best manner as possible as it has the authority
and the confidence of the people.
Sunday, December 13, 2020
Only New Farm Laws can help Remove the Farmers’ Distress, Brokers must be Dealt with Iron Hands
Friday, December 11, 2020
Purposeless agitation of Disguising farmers
Parmanand Pandey
The ongoing agitation of some farmers of Punjab from November 26 in Delhi is being presented by a section of media and the fissiparous forces as if there are two fighting camps arrayed against each other. The fact is that no government can afford to work against the interests of the farmers and that is what has been taken care of in these farm laws. These farm laws have been long overdue, and they should have been enacted some fifty years ago.
Think of neem coating of Urea bags, this simple step to stop the black marketing was not taken due to the pressure of the vested interests, who wanted to perpetuate it. The subsidy and loan-waiver based farmers' policies may make some leaders popular but ultimately, they do not help the farmers to stand on their own feet. The so-called Kisan-movement of some kulaks, aarhatiyas and selfish politicians must be exposed as it is against the interests of more than 99 per cent farmers of the country, most of them happen to be small and marginal farmers. It is an open secret that only this section of farmers, which is behind this artificial agitation has been cornering all the benefits in the name of farmers. It is also crystal clear that those who have nothing to do with farmings and yet are lending their support to it are insincere, disingenuous people and they are so filled with the hatred for the present dispensation that they refuse to see the factual position. Hence, they need to be cured of chronic jaundice they suffer from.
MSP, frankly speaking, is also a deception. It has not helped the poor farmers anywhere except in Punjab. Go to villages of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar and see that wheat, paddy or maize is never purchased on MSPs. Even for the sugarcane prices, small farmers have to run from pillar to post. For obtaining the selling slips of their canes, they have to cajole and grease the palms of dalals and petty officials. They do not get the arrears of their canes for months and sometimes even for years. This simple fact cannot be understood by the romanticised revolutionaries and the parasitic NGO managers, who are funded and paid to work for their masters sitting outside the country.
These were the same people, who were wailing and discussing on the television channels that the disease COVID might not kill the poor people, but the starvation will, without doubt, kill them. A bearded and fraud television channel owner, who has duped hundreds of crores and who also claims to be an economist, must have held discussions with some pseudo economists for nearly ten days in the wake of the lockdown and the crux of his discussion was that thousands would die because of hunger. But when more than eighty crore people started getting free ration every month for longer than eight months along with Rs 500/ in cash across the board, these spurious economists did not show even the minimum courtesy and basic moral courage to welcome this novel measure of helping the people.
It is well-nigh impossible to establish Ramrajya but sincere efforts made in that direction should be encouraged. Therefore, these farm laws, if honestly implemented are bound to ameliorate a lot of the small farmers. The need is to go for sustainable development and the pressure from the agriculture is to be unburdened and this is not going to be solved by retaining the APMS and MSPs. They can only be short term measures.
The government will do well to convince the tiny and misguided section of farmers, who have laid siege of some of the Delhi roads, that they must give up their adamant attitude and go back to their farming. But they will not do that because their handlers will not agree to it. Those who are sleeping can be awakened but those who feign to be sleeping they must be handled differently. This is for the government with enormous resources to think as to how to deal with these rich kulaks and motivated farmers.