Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Cautiously optimistic Hry farmers say local workers available in plenty

- Pawan Sharma & Neeraj Mohan pawan.sharma@hindustant­imes.com ■

CHANDIGARH: Even the hardy Haryana farmers lavishly admire the paddy transplant­ation skills of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh labourers.

For example, five labourers from Eastern India can transplant paddy in one acre in a day. It is this back-breaking capacity to work from dawn and beyond dusk of the migrant labourers that used to be at the core of paddy transplant­ation across 32 lakh acre in the state.

But this year, Haryana farmers may have to manage the show largely with the local labourers if the Bihar and UP workforce that is still staying back decides to rush home due to the fear of coronaviru­s before paddy transplant­ation begins on June 15.

“We will take a call on this issue one month later as by that time, picture will be clear. Paddy transplant­ation picks up momentum in the first week of July. By then, hopefully, the situation might improve,” Jai Parkash Dalal, agricultur­e minister, said.

“Let’s remember that there was shortage of labourers during the wheat harvesting, which is a much bigger operation. It has been managed very well. Paddy transplant­ation labour is different that comes in middle of June. Koi naa koi intjaam karenge (We will arrange something).”

Paddy is largely grown in Karnal, Kurukshetr­a, Kaithal, Yamunanaga­r, Panipat, Ambala, Fatehabad, Sirsa, Sonepat , Hisar, Rohtak, Faridabad and Palwal.

The paddy growers admit that absence of labourers from Bihar and UP will cause problems, but it will not hamper the activity completely. “It is too early to start worrying,” said Nirmal Singh, a farmer from Karnal’s Indri. He quipped, “Earlier, people were concerned how wheat will be harvested. There was no labour shortage as local workers were out of job and they played a crucial role in manual harvesting and management of wheat chaff.” Endorsing Nirmal’s views, Raj Kumar of Kurukshetr­a’s Ladwa said, “There was no shortage of labour due to lockdown during wheat harvesting. This year, we paid ₹1,600 per acre for the management of wheat chaff against ₹1,800 paid last year.”

However, a leading paddy grower, Mahavir of Tohana in Fatehabad, disagreed. “In my region, labourers from Bihar are not available. We will face serious issues. They are expert in transplant­ing paddy,” Mahavir, who owns 22-acre land, said. According to Balbir Singh of Fatehabad’s Daulatpur village, local labourers cannot match paddy sowing skills of those from Bihar and UP.

However, most of the farmers HT talked to said labour shortage was not as serious an issue as it appeared. “Local labour is available in plenty,” was the common refrain of the farmers.

They said large number of migrant labourers, who come for the harvesting of sugarcane, are still staying back. Also, local landless workers could play a bigger role the paddy transplant­ation. “We don’t depend entirely on the migrant labourers for the paddy transplant­ation. Local brick-kiln workers also do the job here,” said Jagmal Kambo from Ratangarh in Yamunanaga­r.

And, an elderly farmer, Prithvi Chand of Yunispur village of Karnal, agreed. “If labourers from Bihar are unable to come, the outof-job local labourers are available in plenty. Haven’t we harvested wheat?”

 ??  ?? ■
A group of migrant workers heading to their native place in Uttar Pradesh during lockdown, in Bhiwani on Friday. MANOJ DHAKA/HT
■ A group of migrant workers heading to their native place in Uttar Pradesh during lockdown, in Bhiwani on Friday. MANOJ DHAKA/HT

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India