The Hindu (Kolkata)

‘Bitter’ sugarcane workers from drought-stricken Marathwada hold little hope from Lok Sabha poll

- Abhinay Deshpande ABHINAY DESHPANDE

With the sugarcane harvest season coming to an end, seasonal migrant workers from the drought-hit Marathwada region, who spend months toiling in the sugarcane ‹elds of western Maharashtr­a and neighbouri­ng Karnataka, are back home, but hold little hope that the outcome of the Lok Sabha poll will bring any change to their ‘bitter’ plight.

Every year, about 12 lakh to 15 lakh residents of Beed, Jalna, Parbhani, Latur, Nanded, Hingoli, Dharashiv (previously Osmanabad), and Chhatrapat­i Sambhaji Nagar (previously Aurangabad) districts in the Marathwada region migrate to the sugar belt — Sangli, Kolhapur, Pune, Satara, Solapur, and Ahmednagar — driven by scant jobs in their villages.

The villagers leave in tolis, groups of workers, during the harvest season, which spans from October to March-April, and stay either on the sugar factory premises or in the ‹elds. A migrant couple, called a koyta (sickle), earns between §300 and §500 a day. Once they return home, the men work as masons or cleaners, while women work as domestic help.

Migrant workers like Ganpa Dagdu Rathod, 50, from Vasanthnag­ar Tanda in Beed’s Majalgaon taluka, are resigned to the reality that the cycle of seasonal migration and temporary ‹nancial relief will repeat, undisturbe­d by political seasons. “Nothing ever changes. My father went to work at the karkhana (sugar factory). I started going to work in my teens. Now my son, Vinod, 25, has joined me,” he says.

‘Lives remain the same’ Seated at the Hanuman Mandir in his village, Mr. Rathod says “there is no ilaj (solution)”. “We are poor and will continue to remain so. We toil with little break to earn enough to survive, not to live. Politician­s come and go, but our lives remain the same.”

Of the 48 Lok Sabha seats in Maharashtr­a, eight come under the Marathwada region — Aurangabad, Jalna, Parbhani, Nanded, Hingoli, Beed, Osmanabad, and Latur. While Hingoli, Nanded, and Parbhani went to polls in the second phase on April 26, voters in Osmanabad and Latur cast their ballots in the third phase on May 7. Aurangabad, Jalna, and Beed go to polls in the fourth phase on May 13.

Beed and Jalna were epicentres of the recent Maratha agitation for reservatio­n. In Beed, the BJP has replaced two-time sitting MP Pritam Munde with her sister Pankaja Munde. She is pitted against Bajrang Sonwane of the NCP (SP).

In Jalna, Union Minister and ‹ve-term MP Raosaheb Danve faces Kalyan Kale of the Congress, while in Aurangabad, sitting MP Imtiyaz Jaleel of the AIMIM will take on Shiv Sena (UBT)’s four-time MP Chandrakan­t Khaire and the Eknath Shinde-led Shiv Sena’s ‹ve-time Paithan MLA Sandipanra­o Bhumre.

“Every election, candidates discuss developmen­t, water schemes, and better agricultur­e policies, but after the elections, we are forgotten,” says Namdev Rathod, 75, a resident of Vasanthnag­ar Tanda.

A distance away at Godavari Tanda in Parbhani district, Balsaheb Pawar, a second-generation migrant worker, says if there were enough water and jobs here, villagers wouldn’t leave for six months every year. “We’re used to this now. Half the year, our villages are half-empty, with only the elderly and kids at home. Nothing has changed in the past 10 years, and we don’t have any hope for the future.”

 ?? ?? Resigned to reality: Residents of Vasanthnag­ar Tanda in Beed, one of the eight districts in the Marathwada region.
Resigned to reality: Residents of Vasanthnag­ar Tanda in Beed, one of the eight districts in the Marathwada region.

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