Panjab Floods add to Woes in Farmer Suicide Hit Region
Panjab Floods add to Woes in Farmer Suicide Hit Region |
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“The Panjab government’s compensation package only covers the cost of planting and not loss of income. We call upon the community to donate generously so that debt ridden farmers, who have less than 5 acres, may receive another Rs 5,000 per acre,” said Mejindarpal Kaur, UNITED SIKHS director who led her team to the flood affected areas. “Even though the flood waters have receded, the ground is too wet. 50% of the flooded fields cannot be replanted and those replanted will have their yield reduced by 40% because of late replanting. Further, the next wheat crop will be delayed by a month,” said Chaudhary Ram Dia Singh, a leading social activist and farmer from the village of Bangah. After the river Ghaggar burst its banks following heavy rainfall, which flooded some 2,00,000 (2 Lakh) acres of crops, a team from UNITED SIKHS visited the village of Bangah in Sangrur, a district often described as the farmer-suicide belt of Panjab. The team set about to assess the damage to crops and to determine how relief can be brought to the region. The village of Bangah alone has suffered complete damage to 2,700 acres out of a total of 3,000 acres of crop. You may watch a video of the flooded areas and interviews here. |
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During an interview with the UNITED SIKHS team, Panjab Finance Minister, Manpreet Singh, said, “As a result of these floods an affected farmer faces a loss of income of up to Rs 15,000 per acre this year. This loss will worsen the situation of farmers who are riddled with debt, who generally have less than 5 acres of land, which we fear will make them very vulnerable,” said Inderjit Singh Jaijee, a former MLA of the region, who has been advocating for the rights of farmer suicide victims for some 20 years. The Panjab government’s compensation package only covers the cost of planting and not loss of income. We call upon the community to donate generously so that debt ridden farmers, who have less than 5 acres, may receive another Rs 5,000 per acre,” said Mejindarpal Kaur, UNITED SIKHS director who led her team to the flood affected areas. “We will work with the Baba Nanak Charitable Trust of Chandigarh, which has been helping farmer suicide victims, to distribute relief to vulnerable farmers,” she added. The Sangrur district, along with its sub-divisions, has the highest rate of farmer suicides in Panjab, where farming families, riddled with debt, often witness the male breadwinner taking his own life as a result. The recent flood damage to their precious crop will only add to the farmers’ misery and saddle them with further debt. “In this village alone, 33 individuals have committed suicide. When a breadwinner commits suicide, their children are totally ruined”, explains Mr Chaudary Ram Dia Singh. He says, “When a crop fails (from flood), it takes a farmer 5 years to get up on his feet again. Once the farmer recovers, it (the flood) comes again”. To donate, please post a cheque to a UNITED SIKHS office nearest to you or donate online at www.unitedsikhs.org/donate |