Gulf Today

Indian farmers feed strawberri­es to cattle amid virus lockdown

‘Tourists and ice cream producers are the main buyers of strawberri­es, but there are no tourists now,’ says Anil Salunkhe

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As hundreds of millions of Indians remain locked down to stem the spread of coronaviru­s, some of its cattle are getting treated to strawberri­es and broccoli that farmers are struggling to transport and sell in cities amid the three-week lockdown.

Demand for such premium farm produce typically jumps in the summer, but with India’s farm supply chain in disarray, farmers are unable to get goods to market.

The sudden drop in demand is hurting millions of farmers in the world’s second-most populous country, with coronaviru­s cases surging to more than 1,900 in India, while the death toll rose to 50 on Wednesday.

“Tourists and ice cream producers are the main buyers of strawberri­es, but there are no tourists now,” said Anil Salunkhe, while feeding strawberri­es grown in his two-acre farm to his cows in Satara district, some 250 km (155 miles) south-east of Mumbai.

He was hoping to make 800,000 rupees ($10,600), but now has not even recovered the production cost of around 250,000 rupees, as it has become tough to transport produce to large cities. Munishamap­pa, a farmer near India’s IT hub of Bengaluru, dumped 15 tonnes of grapes in a nearby forest after failing to sell them — he had spent 500,000 rupees on his crop.

He had even asked nearby villagers to come collect his fruit for free, but few turned up, he said.

Indian grapes are also exported to Europe, which has sharply cut purchases in the past few weeks as the virus takes a heavy toll there, said Dyanesh Ugle of Sahyadri Farms, the country’s biggest grape exporter.

Growers of expensive flowers such as gerbera, gladioli and bird of paradise, meanwhile, are worried after weddings that typically generate the bulk of demand have gotten cancelled.

“In summer, I sell one flower for 15 to 20 rupees. Now nobody is willing buy even at 1 rupee,” said Rahul Pawar, who owns a 2-acre flower farm, as he plucked flowers to dump them into a compost pit.

Another flower grower Sachin Shelar says the bulk of his earnings come from the summer season, but sales have stalled during this crucial period.

Ajay Jadhav, who relies on upmarket restaurant­s to sell basil, iceberg lettuce and bok-choy grown on his three acres, said his fellow villagers won’t take away the vegetables even for free.

“I don’t have a choice but to make manure out of these exotic vegetables,” he said. “Rural folks don’t even know the names of these vegetables. Forget about them cooking these.” The head of the World Health Organizati­on voiced deep concern on Wednesday about the rapid escalation and global spread of COVID-19 cases from the new coronaviru­s, which has now reached 205 countries and territorie­s.

WHO Director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said that his agency, the World Bank and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund backed debt relief to help developing countries cope with the pandemic’s social and economic consequenc­es.

“In the past five weeks there has been a near-exponentia­l growth in the number of new cases and the number of deaths has more than doubled in the past week,” Tedros told a virtual news conference at the organisati­on’s Geneva headquarte­rs.

“In the next few days we will reach 1 million confirmed cases and 50,000 deaths worldwide,” he said.

China, where the coronaviru­s outbreak first emerged in December, reported dwindling new infections on Wednesday and disclosed for the first time the number of asymptomat­ic cases, which could complicate how trends in the outbreak are read.

Asked about the distinctio­n, Dr. Maria van Kerkhove, a WHO epidemiolo­gist who was part of an internatio­nal team that went to China in February, said the WHO’S definition included laboratory-confirmed cases “regardless of the developmen­t of symptoms”.

“From data that we have seen from China in particular, we know that individual­s who are identified, who are listed as asymptomat­ic, about 75 per cent of those actually go on to develop symptoms,” she said, describing them as having been in a “pre-symptomati­c phase”. The new coronaviru­s causes the respirator­y disease COVID-19.

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Anil Salunkhe feeds strawberri­es to his cow at Darewadi village in Satara district in the western state of Maharashtr­a.
Reuters ↑ Anil Salunkhe feeds strawberri­es to his cow at Darewadi village in Satara district in the western state of Maharashtr­a.

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