Suicide notes in Vidarbha are at times addressed to the Prime Minister, the desperate last cries of voices that went unheeded when alive.
Seeking authenticity for his letter to the Prime Minister and the President, Ramachandra Raut composed it with care on Rs.100 non-judicial stamp paper. Then he added a few more addressees, including his village sarpanch and the police, in the hope that it got home someplace. Then he killed himself. A mere digit in the nearly 250 farm suicides that hit Vidarbha in four months; but a villager desperate to be heard on the reasons for his action: “The two successive years of crop failure is the reason.” Yet, “bank employees came twice to my home to recover my loans”. (Despite a government order to go slow on recovery in a region hit by crisis, crop failure and more recently, drought).
Raut's suicide being the third in a month in Dhotragoan in Washim district, the village wants to see it spreads no further. “We try and meet every evening for an hour, all of us, anyone who will come,” says Nandkishore Shankar Raut from Dhotragaon. “The idea is to keep people's morale up.” So Dhotragaon counsels itself. Ramachandra Raut's letter was also an appeal not to be misunderstood. “Don't trouble anyone in my home,” it tells the police. “I am fully responsible for my action.” The stamp paper suicide note carries the seal of the deputy treasury officer of Mangrulpir tehsil dated March 29, and that of the stamp vendor who issued it to Raut on April 7. Raut filled it in and took his life the same day.
The family owes the banks Rs.1.5 lakh. His village pooled money to observe his 13th day ritual, sparing Raut's indebted family further expense.
Unique
Vidarbha's farm suicides have been unique in one respect. Some of those taking their lives have addressed suicide notes to the Prime Minister, the Chief Minister or the Finance Minister. In August 2006 Rameshwar Lonkar of Wardha complained, in his note, to Dr. Manmohan Singh, just a month after the Prime Minister went to his region. “After the Prime Minister's visit and reports of a fresh crop loan, I thought I could live again,” Lonkar wrote. But he found himself rebuffed at every stage while seeking that loan. Sahebrao Adhao's last testament in Amravati the same year painted a picture of usury, debt and land grab.
In November 2006, cotton grower Rameshwar Kuchankar addressed the then Maharashtra Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh in his note. He scribbled it down moments before taking his life in Yavatmal. “We are fed up with the delay in procurement and crashing prices ... Mr. Chief Minister, give us the price.” He also warned State Home Minister R.R. Patil that if the price did not improve at once, suicides would soar. They did.
“These notes are the last cry of despair of people trying to tell their government the reasons for agrarian distress,” says Kishor Tiwari. Mr. Tiwari heads the Vidarbha Jan Andolan Samiti, a body fighting for farmers' rights. “We set up expert committees to tell us why farmers commit suicide when they are themselves telling us the reasons with such clarity in their suicide notes.” The notes often speak of debt, soaring cultivation costs, high cost of living and volatile prices. Some of them trash regressive policies and a credit crunch that have destroyed thousands of farmers here in the past decade. Crop failure and drought coming atop these, ruin fragile lives.
Two years of crop failure in a single crop district can mean 34 months with no income. Vidarbha gained little from the 2008 Farm Loan Waiver which addressed only bank debt. The waiver excluded those farmers holding more than five acres, and made no distinction between dry and irrigated holdings. In Western Vidarbha, farmers take more loans from moneylenders than from banks. And, the average land holding is around seven acres in this mostly unirrigated region.
Of the five states that account for two-thirds of all of India's farm suicides, Maharashtra is by far the worst. According to the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) the State logged 41,404 farm suicides between 1997 and 2008. That is, more than a fifth of the national total of nearly 200,000 in that same period. Of those 12 years, NCRB data show, the years 2006-08 have been the very worst. Within the State, Vidarbha has been the focal point of the tragedy.
Back to square one
However, the situation here seems like a throwback to that of 2005-06, before Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's visit. Hit by a spate of suicides at the time, the State government spoke in many voices. In mid-2005, it gave out a figure of just 141 distress suicides across the whole State since 2001. Challenged in court, it revised this to 524. When the National Commission of Farmers team led by Dr. M.S. Swaminathan visited later the same year, it conceded there had been over 300 in the single district of Yavatmal. The final figure for the whole State that year, put out by the NCRB, was actually 3,926 suicides.
“For a while,” says Mr. Tiwari of the VJAS, “the State revealed real numbers on the website of the Vasantrao Naik Farmers' Self-Reliance Mission. That was because of Dr. Singh's visit and a lashing from the courts.” In fact, those figures were far higher than anything even the VJAS had recorded. This year, however, the website's columns for 2010 are so far blank. The Agriculture Ministry's reply to a question in the Rajya Sabha, based on State claims, says just 23 farm suicides occurred between January and April 8. This, even as other arms of government (and the Leader of the Opposition) put out figures ten times as high. The Vasantrao Naik Mission has itself given out signed data confirming there were 62 such deaths in January alone. (Though it has not put this up on its website.)
The numbers are routinely lowered by tagging hundreds of suicides as “non-genuine”. That is, “ineligible for compensation”. Aimed at curbing the amounts the State has to fork out to bereaved families, this move has caused much damage. “We are deluding ourselves,” says a senior official. “No wonder Ramachandra Raut felt the need to address his letter on stamp paper to the Prime Minister and President as well. He knew nothing would be taken seriously here in Maharashtra.”
Keywords: Maharashtra, Vidarbha, P. Sainath




Dear mr Sainath,
Greatly impressed on seeing all your works so far.I am a lecturer from Madras Christian college arranging resource persons for a abatch of students from Davidson college USA who will be in MCC for a semester exchange program .I will be extremely delighted to have you as a resource person for the topic 'Bonded Labour'on Mon Nov 15thfrom 9 am to 10 30 am at MCC .Your name was highly recommended by Mr muthaih.
Hoping to get a favourable reply soon.
Thanking you
Dear Mr.Sainath,
First of all I thank you from the bottom of my heart for bringing into the limelight all the issues of the Farmers in India. India is an Agricultural Based country and its pathetic to see that the back bone of Agriculture - The Farmer is left like orphan in the times of need. Government does have several schemes and loans, however I really wonder if they are reaching to the needy. The statistics of the farmer suicides is really scary...Its time Govt Acted in right direction.
I feel pity for those innocent people like Raut and Rameshwar who, despite all their suffering still chose to believe in this government machinery and its top executives. And what is this Vidarbha, compared to those big IPLs, T-20s and the grand gals of Common Wealths? Dear Vidarbhites, we, the indians are now all out for games..games..and nothing but games..your crops, your debts, your sufferings, your life..all this are not our concern..in another words, we have nothing but this to say you..go and hang!!
i feel bad,my heart cries,well what can i do except for feeling extremely sorry and sad for the families who have lost people by killing themselves.
There will be a time when all of this will be solved,i hope..!!
Willful neglect of agriculture and water management by government and society at all levels, along with drought, is responsible for the farmer suicides happening in Vidarbha. Weather is going to become more and more uncertain as a result of on going climate change. For example there were floods in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh last October(well past the usual monsoon season) when ther is drought in Vidarbha. There fore more money and effort should be spent for storing and distributing water from regions where there is excess of water to regions where there is shortage. Government and politicians should use at least small part of the imagination they use in corruption to deal with the problem of water management.
Thanks to P.Sainath for bringing the plight of Vidarbha farmers to light. I think this should be in the main stream news rather than stupid IPL or Sania-Shoib marriage issues. The Hindu remains one of the very few English news papers that are not tabloidized and focuses on the problems of common people and offers objective news.
I read this in 'The Hindu' first thing this morning and ever since have felt so ashamed as a fellow indian. Such a pity none of the administrators seem to bother. If I remember right, you have been writing about this for more than 3-4 years now with at least 1 article a week and still these administrators don't seem to do a thing about it! Shame on them!
It is very interesting to see the universality of the plight of the farmer during this current economic crisis. In my region of the US we are going on what could be our 5th year of drought. Currently aid payments are being held up by a lack of planning for their distribution and an unwillingness/inability to fully compensate those that were willing to jump through all of the hoops that are placed in front of us to be eligible for aid.
There seems to be a general lack of understanding of those in government of the processes and requirements that farmers have to produce their crops and to care for their live stock. Because even the timing of disaster payments are not linked to the times they are needed, and the farmer is forced to find loans, which are near impossible to get in this current great recession, or default on loans that they currently have. If money is needed to buy forage in the Winter month of March, a payment at the end of May is a cold comfort for one who had to make the hard decisions how to feed or liquidate their herd. The payment is even late for one that has to plant their crops in the spring.
My heart goes out to those Marathi farmers that have been suffering as many of the other farmers around the world have. If we see the government as having a death ear, then as the consumer we must try to listen and support the farmer with our purchasing habits, it is the smallest and the most important thing we can do. - An American Dairy Farmer
These things would hardly ever stop. But I am surprised as to how come Mr. Raj Thakre is keepin' mum on such issues. He should be the flag holder against this issue rather than Marathi language promoter. He should be promoting the interests of the Marathi farmers rather.
We should feel ashamed of being the mute spectator of this whole gruesome situation. Until every single suicide is averted and every single malnutrition death is stopped we should put a ban on the celebration of any festival be it in the name of Shivaji or Gandhi. This is certainly not a democracy which our forefathers imagined. Double the taxes. Put exorbitant entertainment tax on IPL. Cut electricity supply to malls. Make it compulsory for every Public sector and private sector bank to lend 30& of its loans to farmers at very concessional rates. Put cess on Cars high end mobiles laptops, and build godowns and cold storages from that money. Put progressive taxes on Private educational institutions and build primary and secondary free schools for boys and girls from villages. No water parks in drought hit areas. Make Chief Minister and Chief ministers live in those drought hit areas for April and May.
This is a big order, but see what can you do… they are such a fine poor and hardworking fellows, my farmer brothers and sisters
How can they do that --
The numbers are routinely lowered by tagging hundreds of suicides as “non-genuine”. That is, “ineligible for compensation”.
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We must learn to honour life, by honouring, the last wishes of a dead person. We must read out their letters everyday, till no one has to write such notes any more.
No one can become truly an Indian, if they do not mourn the death of the poor and just shed crocodile tears for Taj and Oberoi victims. That would blasphemy to the conscience of the nation.
Thank you P. Sainath for stirring up our souls with this report. My thoughts are with all families of the suicide victims.
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