Toronto Star

Meddling in India protests is misguided

- VIJAY SAPPANI CONTRIBUTO­R Vijay Sappani is a board member of the Macdonald-Laurier Institute and several Indo-Canadian institutio­ns.

Weeks ago, Greta Thunberg, Rihanna, Meena Harris and other prominent figures tweeted about the farmers’ protests in India. Over the weekend, a group of 100 organizati­ons from across Canada, the U.S., the U.K., Italy, France and South Africa took out a full-page advertisem­ent in the Star against the new farm laws in India. Oddly enough, food security and environmen­tal organizati­ons were on the list, though the new laws allow for storage of food and prevention of stubble burning that causes environmen­tal pollution.

The first victim of the new age of social media activism is truth. True advocacy for a cause is more than a simple tweet. None of the above-mentioned activists have any serious prior social or charitable associatio­n with India, yet they have advocated for a cause that just happens to be in the news. With nary a peep in the months and years past, these stars are now trying to speak on popular social media issues.

The ad cements the problems with celebrity slacktivis­m on complex issues. For instance, the organizati­ons call on Delhi to “Repeal the pollution penalty on farmers.” How do environmen­tal groups explain the contradict­ion in supporting saving the environmen­t but opposing Indian laws that do just that?

Farmers in the Punjab, Haryana, and western Uttar Pradesh have long benefited from the current agricultur­al system and its taxpayer-funded subsidies. It is not viable or sensible to continue subsidizin­g agricultur­e in one part of the country when other regions are equally capable of growing crops.

Subsidizin­g electricit­y and fertilizer­s have had the expected negative impacts — overuse of electricit­y for pumping water to grow crops in unsuitable areas have led to a shocking drop in the water table; overuse of fertilizer­s is slowly turning the land infertile. A research publicatio­n from Science Advances last week shows India is the world’s largest consumer of groundwate­r. Current depletion trends could lead crop intensity to decrease by 20 per cent nationwide and by 68 per cent in groundwate­r-depleted regions, primarily the Punjab.

With more than 600 million farmers in India and climate change rapidly worsening, India needs to act fast to save itself and the planet. Prime Minister Narendra Modi did exactly that.

The current agricultur­al framework binds farmers just as it protects them from the market. It was a necessity in the early decades after independen­ce, when India was not self-sufficient in producing food. Seven decades later when the country is self-sufficient, the protection is hampering the ability of farmers to sell freely, even within India.

India needs to rationaliz­e its agricultur­al system so that it feeds everyone and helps farmers prosper. The current system leads to tragicomic scenarios like the random fivefold rise in prices of onions, a staple across the country. The new laws allowing for food storage would go a long way to addressing such issues.

As the protests continued, the Modi government has offered to suspend the laws and has met with the protestors several times. The protestors have refused to accept anything other than a complete withdrawal of all the laws. If India is to meet its commitment on climate change, the reforms are a must.

While there is a domestic and rational impetus to reform the agricultur­al system, other countries too have pushed India towards the same. One of the most vocal proponents is Canada. At several WTO meetings, Canada has questioned the subsidies given to Indian farmers, correctly arguing that these difficult reforms stand to benefit both countries in the long run.

The hypocrisy of social-media activists reduces government­s’ efforts to meaningful­ly address issues like sustainabi­lity, climate change and internatio­nal trade. Ultimately, failing to address these issues ends up hurting the very farmers the activists claim to support.

India can do better at handling these protests, which is the biggest cause of concern in the Western world. The use of British-era sedition laws to harass activists and journalist­s is unworthy of the world’s largest democracy.

Three decades of rapidly lifting millions out of poverty have not been a smooth process for India, but it rarely is. These reforms are necessary, and Canada ought to support India’s efforts.

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