Apex Court not impressed by Centre’s claim of drop in farmer suicides
BY M Post Bureau22 Aug 2015 5:39 AM IST
M Post Bureau22 Aug 2015 5:39 AM IST
The Apex Court also sought the government’s response on revisiting its eight-year-old policy on farmers.
“Decrease in number (of suicides) is not enough, there should be no case of farmer suicide in the country,” Social Justice Bench of Justices Madan B Lokur and UU Lalit said.
When Additional Solicitor General Pinky Anand told the court that there was a “considerable decline in unfortunate incidents” of farmers’ suicides, the bench said such incidents should not happen at all.
The court further indicated that the suicides may be linked to certain inherent deficiencies in the National Policy for Farmers, 2007, which may be revisited.
It also questioned the holding of yearly meetings of the committee, headed by renowned agricultural scientist MS <g data-gr-id="36">Swaminathanl</g>, to discuss the problems faced by farmers and said such brain-storming sessions should be held more frequently.
The Bench, which was hearing a PIL seeking government to take steps to prevent farmer suicides, asked the Centre to file an affidavit within six weeks clearing its stand on revisiting the policy.
“<g data-gr-id="32">May <g data-gr-id="38">be</g></g> because of the policy, the farmers are committing suicide. You (Centre) file an affidavit within six weeks stating whether it is necessary to revisit the policy which is eight years old,” it said.
In March this year, the Ministry of Agriculture had filed an affidavit stating that the number of suicide deaths of farmers <g data-gr-id="39">have</g> declined since 2009 and there were factors other than agrarian which led them to take their lives.
The government had said the farmers’ suicide cases were not as alarming as made out in the PIL and claimed that suicides in the country were not due to agrarian reasons only.
It had said that as per National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB), the causes of suicides included family problems, illness, drug addiction, unemployment, dowry dispute and other reasons.
Agriculture Minister Radha Mohan Singh’s recent statement that love affairs, barrenness and impotency were also among the causes of farmers’ suicides had triggered a storm, with Opposition parties accusing the government of being insensitive.
Singh’s written reply in the Rajya Sabha on the issue was virtually identical to the affidavit submitted by his Ministry in the Apex Court. The affidavit had said that out of a total of over one lakh suicides in the country in 2013, cases of farmer suicide were recorded at 8.7 per cent.
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