Deccan Chronicle

Decision to stop distress sales of chilli: Venkaiah

-

The Centre has decided to go in for the Market Interventi­on Scheme with immediate effect to help distressed chilli farmers in TS and AP. The Centre will buy chillies at `5,000 per quintal till May 31.

After calling on Union agricultur­e minister Radha Mohan Singh, Union minister M. Venkaiah Naidu said in a tweet: “Happy that market interventi­on support of `5,000 and additional `1,250 for packaging is announced @Radhamohan BJP for chilli in AP & Telangana. (sic)”

The Centre will buy 88,300 metric tonnes of chillies in Andhra Pradesh and 33,700 metric tonnes in Telangana state.

The chilli issue has taken a political turn in both states. While Opposition Congress, Telugu Desam and BJP had launched a stir against the TRS Government, YSRC chief Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy staged a deeksha and launched protests across AP against the Telugu Desam government, which is an ally of the BJP-led NDA government at the Centre, demanding remunerati­ve price for chilli farmers.

“The government of India decided to intervene in the market and offered these prices. I don’t say this will satisfy all. But once you offer this price, the distress sale will stop. There will be some buoyancy. Traders will realise the government is purchasing and we can also offer same price. Otherwise farmers are helpless. There is no other way,” Mr Naidu told mediaperso­ns.

He said, “This is to create buoyancy in the market and stop distress sales. There is a need to educate farmers on the quantum of crops to be sown. But farmers follow others if they get a good price. It's the same, be it tobacco or any other crop.”

Mr Naidu added that the market system is expanding slowly. Once it expands, the entire country will be able to know the price in Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Kakinada, Telangana state, and they will not sell indulge in distress sales. That, he said, was Prime Minister Narendra Modi's idea and would take some time to bear fruition.

“A farmer takes his chilli crop to the nearest sale point or where he gets good price. From Telangana, he will go to Andhra and viceversa,” he said.

However, Telangana Rythu Sangham rejected the Centre’s offercalli­ng it meagre and demanded MSP of `10,000 per quintal.

“Be it Tamil Nadu or elsewhere, mirchi is priced at `10,500 to `13,500 per quintal. Nowhere it’s lower than `10,000 per quintal. The AP government went a step ahead and offered `1,500 bonus. It’s not too late for states to buy at prevailing national market rates,” said P. Janga Reddy, president of the Sangham.

While Congress, Telugu Desam and BJP had launched a stir against the TRS government, YSRC chief Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy launched protests across AP against the TD.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India