Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Urea crisis looms in MP, Rajasthan

TEST FOR CONG While farmers in MP’S Raisen, Guna protest, long queues seen in Raj’s Hadoti; officer says Kota got 1.61L MT till now

- Punya Priya Mitra and Aabshar H Quazi

BHOPAL/JAIPUR: The newly elected Congress government­s in Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan are facing their first test in the agricultur­e front in the middle of the rabi season (January to March) due to shortage of urea in several districts.

Farmers in Raisen and Guna districts in Madhya Pradesh staged protests and blocked roads after the cooperativ­e societies ran out of the urea on Thursday. The farmers alleged that black-marketing was rampant by private traders. There were reports of protests from Dewas and Neemuch on Friday also.

Meanwhile, in Rajasthan’s Hadoti region, long queues were seen outside cooperativ­e committee offices for urea.

Commission­er, agricultur­e production, Madhya Pradesh, additional chief secretary, PC Meena, says 18 of the 51 districts in the state is facing a shortage. He claims that the shortfall was due to channelisi­ng urea to Haryana and Punjab.

“We are getting additional railway racks for urea and the crisis will end within three to four days. Also, there are some logistical problems leading to the crisis. There is no black marketing going on, I haven’t received any complaints,” says Meena.

However, farm group leaders allege that the shortfall is due to rampant sale of urea in the black market.

“A 45 kg bag of urea cost ~250 and farmer gets it in credit when they purchase it from the cooperativ­e society, but private traders are selling it at ~450 per bag and there is nobody to check it. Traders have been given a free hand because they contribute­d funds during elections,” alleges Bharatiya Kisan Union state general secretary Anil Yadav. Rashtriya Swayamseva­k Sangh-backed Bharatiya Kisan Morcha Madhya Prant general secretary Shivkant Dixit says the shortage is due to government’s policy of giving more urea to traders and less to cooperativ­e societies.

“Earlier 20% of urea was given to traders, now it is 50%. Farmers prefer to buy it from society as they get credit, and hence the long queues,” says Dixit.

According to figures of the agricultur­e department, Madhya Pradesh needs 13 lakh tonne of urea for the ongoing rabi season and so far the state has received 8 lakh tonne, of which 1.5 lakh tonne is still in godowns. The urea quota of Madhya Pradesh is 3.70 lakh tonne every month.

Before the state elections in November, the central government gave 4.10 lakh tonne, with the promise that the state would be given the same quantity during December and January. But till Thursday, the Centre has released only 1.89 lakh tonne of urea, said officials of the agricultur­e department.

“We need an additional 80,000 to 90,000 tonne of urea in December and we have been promised that five railway racks of urea (each rack carries 3,000 tonne of urea) will be provided to MP. It should be sufficient to tide over the crisis,” says Meena.

But the Kamal Nath-led Congress government in Madhya Pradesh is not taking any chances. The chief minister talked to railway minister Piyush Goyal and Union chemicals and fertiliser minister Sadananda Gowda and urged them to provide additional railway racks and urea and also directed officials to monitor the situation.

Meanwhile, the situation in Rajasthan is also grim.

“I have been standing in the queue outside shops for the last couple of days to get 30 bags of urea, but I have not got a single bag,” said Raju Nagar, 45, a farmer from Gadepan village in Kota district. Each bag contains 45 kg urea.

Bharat Singh, Congress MLA from Sangod, Kota, blamed the Centre for the urea shortage. “The Centre failed to allocate sufficient urea to the states and now farmers in Rajasthan are bearing the brunt,” he said.

Blaming the Congress government, Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) Kisan Morcha state secretary Mukut Nagar said, “farmers are struggling to get urea for the rabi season, it’s for the newlyelect­ed state government to ensure its availabili­ty.”

However, officials deny of any urea shortage. Divisional commission­er, Kota, KC Verma said the railway racks with 3,198 metric tonnes of urea arrived on Friday and distribute­d to cooperativ­e societies. He added that the Kota division has so far received 1.61 lakh metric tonnes from its annual quota of 2.38 lakh lakh metric tonnes.

Rajasthan chief minister Ashok Gehlot has also assured that farmers will not face any urea shortage and monitoring will be done at district-level.

On Gehlot’s directions, chief secretary DB Gupta spoke to additional secretary Dharam Pal, and urged him to ensure availabili­ty of urea. Principal secretary agricultur­e and cooperativ­e, Abhay Kumar has been asked to meet secretary fertiliser Bharathi Sivaswami Sihag to discuss the issue. RANCHI: Jharkhand farmers will get annual incentive of ~5,000 per acre land during Kharif season from the next financial year under a new scheme Mukhya Mantri Krishi Ashirwad Yojana (MMKAY), chief minister Raghubar Das announced Friday.

Addressing mediaperso­ns, Das said a provision in this regard would be included in the budget for 2019-20 fiscal and around 22.76 lakh small and marginal farmers, would be covered under the scheme. “These states waiving loans of farmers are spending maximum ~600 crore, while we have decided to spend over ~2,200 crore to make farmers financiall­y strong,” Das said.

The state government’s decision comes close on the heels of the newly formed Congress government­s in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisga­rh waiving off loans of farmers in their respective states.

 ?? REUTERS FILE ?? Madhya Pradesh additional chief secretary says 18 of 51 districts are facing a shortage but crisis will be over in 3-4 days.
REUTERS FILE Madhya Pradesh additional chief secretary says 18 of 51 districts are facing a shortage but crisis will be over in 3-4 days.

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