advertisement
It was a shocking sight that awaited political leaders who reside in Lutyen's Delhi on Tuesday morning. Dressed in loincloth and dhotis, 174 farmers from Tamil Nadu stood outside the residence of former Lok Sabha Speaker PA Sangma, while women were wearing only their petticoat. However, it was the objects in the hands of the agitators that grabbed even more attention. While some of these men and women carried begging bowls made of clay, the others carried skulls of dead farmers.
These farmers from Trichy, Karur and Thanjavur belonged to the Desiya Thenidhiya Nathigal Inaippu Vivasayigal Sangam. They had arrived at the Delhi station at 8 am on Tuesday morning, and immediately left to protest outside the Prime Minister's 7 Lok Kalyan Marg residence. They were, however, stopped well ahead by the authorities. They had left Tamil Nadu on 12 March with three demands for the centre.
Their protests were fuelled by a spate of farmer suicides caused by one of the worst droughts the state has faced in 140 years.
"Over 400 farmers have died in Tamil Nadu because our crops have failed," says Iyyakannu, the Tamil Nadu chief of the Desiya Thenidhiya Nathigal Inaippu Vivasayigal Sangam. He argued that
In January, the National Human Rights Council had issued a notice to the Tamil Nadu government, regarding continuing farmer deaths in the state. According to a Livemint report, the notice said:
A month later, Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami, sanctioned the release of a Rs 2,247 crore package for drought-hit farmers. According to media reports, farmers who depend on irrigation for their crop were to get Rs 5,465 per acre, while those who depend on seasonal rain would get Rs 3,000 per acre.
"We got permission from the Madras High Court to carry out these protests," claims Iyyakannu, unable to restrain his sobs. "They forcibly removed us from the road. How much more will we be made to suffer?" he asks.
On 10 March, Agriculture Minister Radha Ram Mohan Singh had said in the Rajya Sabha that "substantial financial assistance would be given to Tamil Nadu for tackling the drought situation in the state.”
These farmers, however, allege that the Centre's delayed response will worsen the situation back home. "How long will our families survive with no income?" asks a Premkumar, a farmer from Trichy.
Premkumar explained:
The agitators now claim that till their demands are met, they will not go back to their hometowns. "We will stay in Delhi for however long it takes. We will sleep on the pavements, we have nowhere left to go to anyway. Bank authorities insult and abuse us because we are unable to pay our loans. We will die here to show the Central Government the reality of our plight," says Iyyakannu.
(This article was published in arrangement with The News Minute.)
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)