The Hindu (Bangalore)

Unkept promises rankle in this land of gold mines

- Sharath S. Srivatsa

The rail coach factory for which foundation stone had been laid in 2014, between Srinivasap­ura and Mulbagil, but scrapped later, is one of the many instances of broken promises for Kolar, says Raghunanda­n Reddy, a retired teacher in Srinivasap­ura, which is famous for mangoes. “There are no employment avenues as there are no factories. Promises of setting up mango processing centre has not been realised,” he points out at election promises of the past for Kolar remaining on paper.

Congress here has ƒelded K.V. Gowtham to take on M. Mallesh Babu of the Janata Dal (Secular) in the Kolar Lok Sabha constituen­cy.

Mr. Gowtham’s candidatur­e has been seen as a compromise between the Congress factions led by former Speaker K.R. Ramesh Kumar and seventime MP and Food and Civil Supplies Minister K.H. Muniyappa. The deeply divided Congress’s Kolar unit witnessed a rebellion of sorts with ƒve of its lawmakers threatenin­g to resign in protest against moves of Mr. Muniyappa to ƒeld his son-in-law. The sulking Minister is yet to hit the campaign trail though the Congress posed a united front bringing all squabbling leaders on stage at Malur where Rahul Gandhi addressed a rally. The Janata Dal (Secular), which is contesting in three seats as part of seat-sharing arrangemen­t with the BJP, had to hard bargain with its partner for the seat that is held by incumbent BJP MP S. Muniswamy.

Issues in KGF

In Kolar Gold Fields (KGF), the issue of wage settlement of about 3,000 employees of the gold mine, many of whom have already died, still rages. People like Ilangovan and Purushotha­m, whose families are yet to be compensate­d, are hopeful that they would be “adequately paid” after a “foreign company” wins the bid to recover residual gold from the processed ore. “Thousands travel from Marikuppam railway station here to Bengaluru daily in search of work with no employment avenues in KGF. There is a false hope that mines would be reopened,” said Prakash, a part-time actor who has worked in both blockbuste­r hits of KGF franchise and is an autoricksh­aw driver.

Currently, of the eight Assembly segments, including three reserved constituen­cies, in Kolar Lok Sabha constituen­cy, the Congress and JD (S) have ƒve MLAs and JD (S) three respective­ly. Believed to have the highest Scheduled Caste voters among the constituen­cies in India, the SC (right) form the highest electorate in Kolar.

Here, the big Vokkaliga, Muslim, SC (Left) and Kuruba population will have an important say in the electoral outcome. The

Congress’s candidate is from SC (left), while the JD (S) candidate is a Bhovi, a touchable caste among the SCs. Though BJP does not have a large voter base, the party polled over a lakh votes combined across eight Assembly constituen­cies in the recent elections.

Impact of agricultur­e

Despite a four-decade record drought, agricultur­e activities in most parts have not stopped here. In Kolar district, even during normal monsoon years, ƒnancially better o” farmers depend on deep borewells. Those with smaller holdings double as labourers locally, which is seasonal. Apart from growing vegetables, farmers take to sericultur­e and animal husbandry.

“We grow the best quality mangoes. This year, the output has dropped by 70%. Yet farmers have not received adequate drought compensati­on,” said mango grower Ramamurthy in Srinivaspu­ra.

However, those in favour of guarantees like poor landless women labourers, small farmers unable to sink borewells for its prohibitiv­e cost and roadside tea stall vendors, whose numbers are big in the constituen­cy, spoke of its beneƒts. “Guarantees have been a relief in times of price rise,” said Uma, a shopkeeper at Hanchal in Bangarpet. Krishnappa, a farmer in Chintamani, appreciate­d his wife for utilising guarantees well. “We recently bought a refrigerat­or from the money she saved from Gruhalaksh­mi without raising a loan,” he said.

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