Business Standard

Maharashtr­a farmers resume supply

Onion supply in Nashik low, to normalise in a couple of days

- DILIP KUMAR JHA

Striking farmers in Maharashtr­a have resumed supplying commoditie­s after a positive response from Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis for their loan waiver.

A group of farmers’ representa­tives met Fadnavis on Sunday and, according to members of the group, he sought time till July 25 to meet their demands.

“We met the chief minister and other government representa­tives on Sunday. The government agreed to accept our demands. Following the government’s commitment, we have called off our strike and resumed work,” said Hansraj Wadghule-Patil, a member of the Swabhimani Shetkari Sanghatana, a member of the farmers’ group.

Farmers in Maharashtr­a went on indefinite strike on June 1 following the state government’s denial of loan waiver, and this brought the supply of fruit and vegetables to a standstill.

However, farmers in centres such as Nashik and Raigadh are continuing their protests.

Over 2,000 farmers gathered in Nashik on June 7 under the banner of the Maharashtr­a Rajya Samanwaya Samiti and decided to intensify protests across the state beginning June 12. “Farmers have resumed their supplies. Since most farmers had dispatched their stocks to warehouses and cold storages, onion arrivals in the Pimpalgaon (a major centre) market yard had reduced to half on Monday, resulting in its price shooting up by ~1-1.50 a kg to ~7.50 a kg. Arrivals are expected to become normal in the next couple of days,” said Atul Shah, director, Agricultur­al Produce Market Committee (APMC), Pimpalgaon.

The data compiled by the National Horticultu­re Research and Developmen­t Foundation showed onion arrivals in Pimpalgaon at nearly 1,600 tonnes, nearly half of its supply at around the same time last year. The total arrival in Lasalgaon, Asia’s largest onion market yard, was reported at 500 tonnes with a model price at ~5.70 a kg.

Apart from loan waiver, farmers in Maharashtr­a demanded interest-free loans, milk realisatio­n at ~50 a litre, etc. According to the latest study by India Ratings, the farm loan waiver is expected to push up Maharashtr­a’s fiscal deficit by 2.71 per cent. Of the 14.1 million account holders in the state, around 3.1 million have outstandin­g loans of ~30,000 crore.

Over 2,000 farmers gathered in Nashik on June 7 under the banner of the Maharashtr­a Rajya Samanwaya Samiti and decided to intensify protests across the state beginning June 12

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