Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

STUBBLE BURNING: CENTRE JUNKS PUNJAB PLEA

WAR OF WORDS As Punjab CM demands ₹2,000 cr from govt, Centre says ₹97.5 cr already allocated for two years was not used

- Jatin Gandhi and Aurangzeb Naqshbandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

The Centre has rejected Punjab’s demand for subsidy on management of paddy residue. The state government had sought ₹2,000 crore from the Union government for farmers so that they can remove paddy straw without burning it to check pollution and soil damage un the state.

NEWDELHI: After days of targeting each other over the problem of paddy stubble burning by farmers, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) government in Delhi and the Congress-run Punjab government on Friday turned to blaming the Centre for not taking the lead in resolving the ecological crisis.

The Centre hit back by releasing statistics that show that the ministry of agricultur­e had allocated ₹97.5 crore to Punjab for 2016-17 and 2017-18 to deal with the problem of straw burning and the funds remained “unutilised”.

“They (Punjab government) haven’t used the money allocated to them,” agricultur­e minister Radha Mohan Singh said.

Ministry data showed Haryana utilised ₹39 crore of the ₹45 crore allocated to it this year (there was no allocation in 2016-17) and Rajasthan utilised a third of its ₹9 crore. UP was allocated ₹56.01 crore over two years and has used up nearly 90%.

“There is 20 million tonne of paddy straw in Punjab. What will farmers do? Where will they store it?” Punjab chief minister Amarinder Singh told HT over phone. He has demanded about ₹2,000 crore from the Centre for the management of the harvest residue and to prevent farmers from burning it.

“Farmers have their genuine concerns, the Centre has to step in and play an active role in coordinati­ng between the states,” Delhi minister Gopal Rai said on Friday, nearly echoing Singh’s concerns.

On Thursday, a war of tweets had broken out between Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal and his Punjab counterpar­t. The AAP is the principal opposition party in Punjab and has supported farmers burning residual stubble left after harvesting paddy.

Stubble burning is illegal and the Punjab government has penalised nearly 2,400 farmers for it, although reluctantl­y. Farmers are an important political constituen­cy for all parties and in the midst of an agrarian crisis.

Singh insisted that the Centre must call a meeting of all affected states and seek suggestion­s from them. He sought a compensato­ry allowance of ₹100 per quintal of paddy as incentive for farmers to manage crop residue scientific­ally.

Experts concur with the view that the Centre needs to chip in to prevent stubble burning.

“The farmer needs to be supported, not punished,” said agricultur­e expert Devinder Sharma. Blaming the three sides for politickin­g over it and not addressing the problem by planning for it through the year, he said, “This happens every year at this time. When the winds blow away the smoke, they will stop talking about it.”

“A single agency under the Centre should be made responsibl­e for implementi­ng all decisions,” Rai said.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? A farmer burns paddy stubble in a field on the outskirts of Jalandhar on Friday.
AFP PHOTO A farmer burns paddy stubble in a field on the outskirts of Jalandhar on Friday.

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