Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

For MP police, farmers don’t die of debt

State police officers attribute the cause of a majority of deaths to alcohol abuse and family disputes but not debt

- HT Correspond­ents

A farmer is committing suicide every five hours, in the state of Madhya Pradesh.

As many as 1982 farmers and farm labourers committed suicide in the state in one year from February 2016 to mid-february 2017. The numbers have shot up for the first time since 2001.

Reechu, a 55-year-old tribal farmer from Terka village in Alirajpur, committed suicide on October 14 . Police identified “excessive drinking” as the reason behind his extreme step.

However, Reechu’s two wives – Rambai and Nanbai – say it was debt that drove him to suicide. “He used to drink, but never in excess,” insisted Nanbai, adding that she was not sure how much money he owed to the cooperativ­e society and his neighbourh­ood moneylende­r.

“I gave my silver ornaments to the moneylende­r as surety, and people from the cooperativ­e society would regularly ask my husband to pay up. Reechu sank into depression. And then, one day, he consumed pesticide,” she said.

Nanbai said police did not enquire about the circumstan­ces surroundin­g her husband’s death. They simply told her to place her thumb impression on a blank sheet of paper, which later became her “statement”.

The case of 53-year-old Bharpa Singh, who committed suicide at Bhorkuan village in March 2014, was similar. The “investigat­ion” that followed the marginal farmer’s death didn’t go beyond asking his 12-year-old son, Shankar, to drop by the police station and sign a blank piece of paper. The reason cited for Singh’s suicide was the same as Reechu’s. Excessive drinking.

According to figures obtained through RTIS, 546 suicides – including 224 cases pertaining to farmers and 73 to landless labourers – were recorded in Alirajpur between 2014 and 2016. Now, if police are to be believed, 69 killed themselves in an intoxicate­d state and 142 felt they were better off dying than living with illnesses. Only seven committed suicide due to their inability to pay off debts.

Some way off in the Chambal region, Akhlakh Singh Yadav – a 40-year-old farmer from Umri village in Bhind district – committed suicide in April 2015 after his rabi plantation came a cropper. He had bought a piece of land from a fellow villager for ₹1.5 lakh, and a large portion of the money was to be paid after the crops were harvested. Though Yadav left behind a note describing the circumstan­ces surroundin­g his suicide, police attributed his decision to a domestic feud.

The National Crime Record Bureau’s (NCRB) data for 2015 reports ‘family problems’ and ‘illnesses’ as dominant cause of suicides among agricultur­al labourers in the country — accounting for 40.1% (1,843) and 19.0% (872) of 4,595 such cases respective­ly.

Debt-related issues emanating from financial and non-financial institutio­ns accounted for just 3.4% (155) and 2.2% (100) suicides.

The issue of farmer suicides rocked the winter session of the state assembly held in December.

However, the state government’s claim that only a few farmers committed suicide due to financial debt is flawed because the police inquiries — which form the basis for the claim — are mostly conducted with the intent of sparing the ruling party any untoward criticism.

When a Hindustan Times team visited families of such farmers in the tribal districts of Alirajpur (western Madhya Pradesh), Sagar (Bundelkhan­d) and Bhind (Chambal), it found that the police investigat­ions were carried out improperly — invariably attributin­g the cause of suicide to health issues or intoxicati­on.

The financial debt factor was convenient­ly ignored in most cases, and the fact that most farmers did not leave behind a suicide note further helped police present their own version of the story.

In private, law enforcemen­t officers admit that they were nudged by higherups to refrain from attributin­g the suicides to loans taken from cooperativ­es or private moneylende­rs. Few protest because even police constables can be a source of fear in rural areas.

Villagers – especially the poor – cannot even imagine arguing with the formidable men in khaki when they turn up at their doorstep.

Alirajpur superinten­dent of police K Karthikeya­n said the suicides in question had occurred before he assumed charge.

“However, if any shortcomin­gs are found in the investigat­ions, we will reopen the files and incorporat­e the new evidence,” he added.

Experts say factors like crop failure and inability to repay loans cause extreme stress among farmers, pushing them towards taking the extreme step. The fear of defaulting on payments to cooperativ­es is great, because a blackliste­d farmer wouldn’t be able to avail of subsidised seeds and fertiliser­s from there.

This would leave them with no option but to approach private moneylende­rs, who charge exorbitant interest rates on loans.

However, food security analyst Sachin Jain believes there is more to the story. “It’s not just droughts or floods that lead to crop loss for farmers. The way the economy has been structured around them also creates problems,” he said. Home minister Bhupendra Singh denied knowledge of police conducting shoddy probes into farmer suicides. “If something comes to light, I will look into it,” he said.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? The family of Bharpa Singh, who committed suicide in 2014, outside their home in Bhorkuan village, Alirajpur, MP.
HT PHOTO The family of Bharpa Singh, who committed suicide in 2014, outside their home in Bhorkuan village, Alirajpur, MP.

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