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Dr.B.R.Ambedkar

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Political Betrayals Enhance the AGRARIAN Crisis as Politicians Have No Sympathy with Indian Peasantry and Push for Economic Reforms Despite Intense Parliamentary Drama!Framers may not save Life and Land for their Mobile Vote Bank!


Political Betrayals Enhance the AGRARIAN Crisis as Politicians Have No Sympathy with Indian Peasantry and Push for Economic Reforms Despite Intense Parliamentary Drama!Framers may not save Life and Land for their Mobile Vote Bank!


Indian Holocaust My Father`s Life and Time -Two Hundred FIFTEEN

Palash Biswas


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  1. May 10, 2009

    13 Sep 2009 ... Kisan Sabha Leader Holur Shankar Passes Away. Vishwas ... After graduation, he became a wholetimer of the CPI(M) and dedicated his life to ...
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  2. October 11, 2009

    18 Oct 2009 ... THE Jharkhand unit of the All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) recently held its ... This requires that the dedicated Kisan Sabha cadres build their ...
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Seven Vidarbha cotton farmers end lives in 24 hrs

Hindustan Times - ‎9 hours ago‎
The region's farmer suicide toll due to the agrarian crisis has touched 42 so far this month while the figure for last month stood at 54, according to the ...

From green to evergreen revolution and roles of the news media

The Hindu - ‎Nov 16, 2009‎
It is the revival of this spirit among the news media that the scientist has called for in the context of the present agrarian crisis. ...

INDIA'S NATIONAL MAGAZINE

The Hindu - ‎Nov 17, 2009‎
There is evidence to show that the agrarian reforms carried out by the government benefited a significant chunk of the rural populace. ...

Will India cope with emerging food security challenges?

Hindu Business Line - ‎Nov 1, 2009‎
... occurrences of droughts and floods, and generally unrewarding farm activity has adversely affected the rural poor, leading to an agrarian crisis. ...

Indian Americans Mark 25th Anniversary of Indira Gandhi's Assassination

New America Media - ‎Nov 6, 2009‎
Biographer Gupte said of her achievements: "The genesis of today's India occurred far more in her time than even in Nehru's time." Gandhi's agrarian reforms ...

India has huge potential in nutraceutical and functional foods which are ...

fnbnews.com - ‎Oct 28, 2009‎
India has been doing relatively well during the global economic crisis. Our firm economy is the key reason for this. Therefore there has been no meltdown in ...

Neoliberalism and the Dynamics of Capitalist Development in Latin America

Center for Research on Globalization - James Petras, Henry Veltmeyer - ‎3 hours ago‎
This phase, which can be dated from the onset of a region-wide debt and an ensuing "development" crisis, is characterized by dynamic processes of neoliberal ...

What is Maoism?

Monthly Review - ‎Nov 7, 2009‎
Also, it is the Maoists who, in their practice, correctly do not even try to differentiate the rural poor into "agrarian proletariat" or "landless ...

Cherie Blair foundation to help widows in India

Gaea Times - ‎Oct 27, 2009‎
... that the farmer's widow has taken on the mantle to fight the elections against other political parties, who have ignored the agrarian crisis till now. ...

:. (SO) EARLY SNOWFALL IN KASHMIR

Kashmir Watch - Javaid Iqbal Bhat - ‎Nov 14, 2009‎
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He also took a dig at Rahul Gandhi saying, "Instead of sleeping in the houses of the poor, Rahul should see the root cause of their problem."
more by Rahul Gandhi - 20 minutes ago - Daily News & Analysis (1 occurrences)

Sugarcane pricing: Govt calls all-party meet

Thousands of sugarcane farmers from across north India laid siege on New Delhi on Thursday, protesting against the Centre's new sugarcane pricing policy.


With the new sugarcane pricing policy creating an uproar in Parliament, government has invited leaders of all political parties for a breakfast meeting on Monday in a bid to hammer out a solution to the issue.

Leader of the Lok Sabha and Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee has invited the floor leaders for the meeting in the backof DMK, a key ally of ruling UPA, joining the united opposition in the protest against the policy.

"We are open for discussion on all issues," Parliamentary Affairs Minister P K Bansal told reporters after the Business Advisory Committee meeting of the Lok Sabha.

The BAC meeting saw Deputy Leader of BJP Sushma Swaraj telling the government that her party has no objection to the ordinance brought on the issue provided it is not used as a "pretext to deprive farmers of their due".

FREE Market democracy has killed Indian Agriculture and Peasants are VICTIMISED in genocide culture. Economic Reforms do all the tasks of Mass destruction and Indian Economy has nothing for the Peasants. Indian politicians, the agents of corporates and MNCs have nothing to do for RURAL India and they happen to be tagged with SENSEX Shining Superpowr Nuclear India. But our people allow them to decorate our forum. SHAME! Shame! shame!it makes no difference to the Stand Off in centaral india, Lalgarh, Nandigram, Singur, Bidarbh nor to the status  of Sugar Cane cultivation as the winter session of Parliament bagan today on a stormy note as expected with the Lok Sabha adjourned for the day amid pandemonium by all Opposition parties which protested application of uniform sugarcane prices across the country.The Rajya Sabha, too, adjourned till tomorrow after paying respects to sitting Members Pyarelal Khandelwal and Mahendra Sahni, who passed away recently.

Just in: Naxals blow up railway track in Jharkhand, 50 hurt

Money control.com reports:

Sugar mills in Uttar Pradesh are yet to begin crushing for this season, which typically begins in November, due to non-availability of raw materials. Reports suggest that sugar mill owners have agreed to pay Rs 180 per quintal for sugarcane, which is Rs 50 higher than the fair and renumerative price fixed at Rs 129.84 per quintal. Farmers are demanding Rs 280 per quintal and have stopped supplies in anticipation of a higher price.

 

Meanwhile, Parliament was adjourned on the first day of its winter session due to protests by opposition parties against the Centre's sugarcane price move that discourages states from fixing higher prices. Thousands of farmers protested in Delhi against the low, state-controlled sugarcane price. The protests highlights the rural discontent over the government's sugar ordinance. Raw-sugar prices have almost doubled this year, with future contracts recording a 28-year high in September.

 

Sugar stocks tumbled on news of a delay in the crushing season and protest by farmers outside Parliament. Bajaj Hindusthan, Balrampur Chini, Dhampur Sugar, Dharani Sugars, Dwarikesh Sugar, Shree Renuka, and Triveni Engineering fell 5-8%. Andhra Sugar, EID Parry, KCP Sugar, Oudh Sugar Mill, Ponni Sugars (E), Simbhaoli Sugar, Upper Ganges Sugar, and Uttam Sugar were down 2-4%.

 

Ambareesh Baliga of Karvy Stock Broking says the risk-reward ratio is not in favour of sugar stocks. "If you assume that the sugar prices will move up 10-15% from here, Balrampur Chini or Bajaj Hindusthan could possibly move another 10-15% more from here. But if you see the sugar prices coming down 20% over the next 4-5 months, these stocks will crash by more than 30-40% because the good news is already there in stock prices. Sugar prices move in cycles and this is clearly a cyclical industry. We have seen a good part of that over the last 6-8 months. Going ahead, whatever adverse news comes, it will actually batter these stocks."

http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/market-edge/farmer-protest-delaycrushing-pull-sugar-stocks-down_425949.html

The farmers' protest against the Centre's new ordinance on sugar cane pricing made the day for parties outside the UPA and even some of UPA's neglected allies. This was an issue on which they ferociously cornered the government, and for the first time after the UPA government came back to power in May 2009, forced it on a back foot.

In 1971 , I myself had to BURN sugar cane grown on ACRES of Land as we could not afford the labour Cost. The Mills would not take sugar cane and we had to go down to the CRASHERS to get Just Rs Four per quintle. I Understand the Problem and support the Peasants on the streets. But at the same time, the Parliamentary Drama seems to me rather as a SUPER DUPER Subversion once again!

Political Betrayals Enhance the AGRARIAN Crisis as Politicians Have No Sympathy with Indian Peasantry and Push for Economic Reforms Despite Intense Parliamentary Drama!Framers may not save Life and Land for their Mobile Vote Bank! even today, No Political leader is a little bit Concerned with the Ethnic Cleansing, Modified genetic seed Package, Land Aquisition indiscriminate, Exodus from the Villages , Monoplistic Aggression against Indian farmers, Retail Chain, Chemical Disaster,Strategic Rural Marketing ! While they use the Sugar Cane Issue to mobilise the Vote Banks respectively, they NEVER tried to mobilise a Peasant Movement. The Kisan sabha, an organisation of CPIM has memebers more than ONE CRORE but the Party itself has adopted Cpaitalist ways and is indulged in Mass destruction in Rural Bengal, for which the Red Citadel is Threatened as never before!

It has always been the same story even during Colonial Rule and so called Renaiassance and struggle for Fredom as the Politicians always Supported the Foreign Rulers whenever Indian Aboriginal Indigenous Peasants indulged themselves in Uprising and Insurrections. Just trace the History of Indigo Revolt, Sanyasi Vidroh, Snthal and Munda Insurrection as so on.

Even during last Six decades it has always been the History of Great Betrayals. Peasant insurrections in Telengana, Shrikakulam, Dhimri Block and Naxal Bari have been CRUSHED  without addressing the Agrarian Crisis and the marxists who originally led all these insurrections betrayed the Peasants. My father led the Dhimri Block Uprising and we have the flames burning in our heart.

Great failure of Green revolution ignited the Punjab crisis which was subverted in Khalisatani movemnet just because Political parties never stood with the peasants. sikh Identity with Akali movement led to the tragedy of Operation Blue star and we had to witness Unprecedented Indian Holocaust reapeated once again in SIKH GENOCIDE. Hindutva forces along with the congress govt. in the centre did everything to crush the Peasants.

I had been in Meerut during Bharatiya kisan Union Movement led by Mahendra Singh Tikait while farmers from Uttar Pradesh have Seized the National Capital Zone! What hapened? What did Mr tikait do? He along with his supporters were used to balance the Vote Bank Equations.

During Eighties itself, sharad Joshi led the Shetkari kamgar Union created waves!Where is mr. joshi today while the Peasants in Western India , specially in Maharashtra and all over South india have no escape route but to commit sui cide! reportedly he has joined Hindutva forces!

We all know about Chowdhari Charan Singh. He was then Home Minister and led the Military repression of Dhimri block and dened the incident in the assembly. As my father Pulin Babu believed in democratic Set Up, he always accepted Chowdhari Charan singh as the leader of indian Peasantry. My Father was in the national executive of Bharatiya Krishak samaj led by Chowdhari charan singh during Green revolution days!Later, the Chowdhari became the Prime Minister of India. I have heard the story in meerut.The suffering Sugar cane Peasants from Bagpat,his home constituency and Western Up visited the prime Minster to tell their Grievances. Charan Singh Scolded them saying, MERI TPI PE GANNA Lagao! Plant Sugar cane in my cap!

My father used to tell that chowdhari always responded with a typical phrase, ` MAIN TO BAHARA HOON' I am Deaf! Whenever the peasants reached him! I have worked in Meerut as a Journalist during 1984 to 1990. I realised that the Great leader and his worthy son chowdhari ajit singh did NOTHING for the Peasnats. Chowdhari Devilal and his son Omprakash chowtala followed suit.

Meanhile, Indian spot sugar snapped a four-day winning streak on Thursday on a slight drop in demand and hopes the federal government will resolve the cane price dispute in northern Uttar Pradesh state, dealers said.

Carrying sugarcane stems, they paralysed key roads in central Delhi as they marched from Ramlila Grounds to Jantar Mantar, the 17th century observatory that has become a demonstration hotspot.

The protest was organised by Ajit Singh's Rashtriya Lok Dal (RLD), Mahendra Singh Tikait's Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) and the Rashtriya Kisan Mazdoor Sangathan. At Jantar Mantar, RLD chief Ajit Singh said, "Farmers should have been cutting crops right now and preparing to sow the next one. But the government's faulty policies and high-handedness have forced farmers to come here to protest."

Many farmers threatened violent protests if the government did not accept their demands. "The price fixed by the government for sugar is not justified. If we don't get the right price, we will make sure no grain reaches Delhi and block all vehicles carrying milk, vegetables and grains," said a farmer from UP.

SP general secretary Amar Singh said, "The Fair and Remunerative Price (FRP) can be set for industry barons but not for poor farmers. The faulty system is a major cause of farmer suicides." He also took a dig at Rahul Gandhi saying, "Instead of sleeping in the houses of the poor, Rahul should see the root cause of their problem." Former Union minister for rural development, the RJD's Raghuvansh Prasad, said, "The ordinance was anti-farmer."The BKU's Mahendra Singh Tikait said, "Sugarcane prices should be raised to over Rs280 a quintal."



In Kolhapur, a key market in top sugar producer Maharashtra, the price of the most traded S-variety sugar fell 0.5 percent to 3,385.65 rupees per 100 kg. The price has risen 84 percent in 2009.

"Demand has tapered due to higher prices," said a member of the Bombay Sugar Merchants Association. "I think very soon mills in Uttar Pradesh will begin crushing. The government has been discussing the issue with all stakeholders."

Thousands of Indian farmers protesting low state-controlled sugarcane prices forced the postponement of the first day of the parliamentary winter session on Thursday, highlighting rural discontent over government policy. See [ID:nSP490330]

Sugar price has risen over six percent in last fortnight on tight supplies due to a delay in cane crushing and lower output estimate.

Southern and western part of the country had received unseasonal rains last week, which trimmed pace of crushing. But now crushing is picking up momentum, traders said.

In the 2009/10 season, lower acreage and poor rains will keep India's output at 15.3 million tonnes, a little more than last year's output of 15 million tonnes, falling severely short of domestic consumption of about 23 million for a second straight year, a Reuters poll showed.

The ruckus in the Lok Sabha began soon after obituaries, compelling Speaker Meira Kumar to adjourn it for half an hour, washing out the Question Hour. Her plea that she will allow debate on the sugarcane prices fell on deaf ears.

While the Congress claimed the prime minister's decision to "tweak" the ordinance on pricing of sugar cane was at the instance of AICC general secretary Rahul Gandhi, the opposition appeared jubilant.

At the end of a day marked by farmers' protests in Delhi and noisy scenes in parliament, prime minister Manmohan Singh had to concede that the ordinance which fixed a centrally administered Fair and Remunerative Price (FRP) for sugar cane at Rs130 per quintal would be "tweaked." Plainly, the FRP would be upwardly revised. Sources told DNA that the upward revision could be as high as Rs200 per quintal for sugar cane. An all party meeting has been fixed on Monday morning to discuss the matter.

The ferocity of the attack by protesting farmers and the opposition clearly unnerved the government, but it claimed that the "critical intervention" in the matter was made by Rahul Gandhi. After meeting his Cabinet colleagues -- agriculture minister Sharad Pawar, finance minister Pranab Mukherjee and home minister P Chidambaram -- the prime minister decided not to allow the situation to become a political powder keg.
All day long, however, Delhi was laid siege to by thousands of farmers, and a united opposition, including the BJP, Rashtriya Lok Dal, the Samajwadi Party, the Janata Dal (U) and the CPI(M). The CPI first disrupted Parliament and later addressed the crowd.
"We will not allow parliament to function unless the ordinance is withdrawn," Samajwadi Party leader Mulayam Singh Yadav said.

Ajit Singh, from whose Meerut-Baghpat area of influence most farmers had come, demanded at least Rs250 per quintal price for sugar cane. "If this price is not given, then no farmer will agree to grow sugar cane, and these Delhiwalas who are buying sugar at Rs40 per kg, will find it difficult to buy it for even Rs200 per kg," he said at a rally at the protest site.

The bitter battle over sugar may be over for now, but it has served like an alarm bell for the Congress over how fragile its hold on farmer-friendly policies can become. The mobilisation by the opposition also demonstrates that the rest of the Winter Session will be no cakewalk for the government.



BJP President Rajnath Singh had given an adjournment notice, seeking discussion on the advisability of the Sugarcane (Control) Amendment Ordinance promulgated by the Manmohan Singh Government recently.

Through this ordinance, the Centre has replaced the statutory minimum support price (MSP) wih the fair and remunerative price (FRP) of Rs 129 per quintal. The FRP has been made imperative for State Governments which have had been announcing their own state advisory price (SAP) for sugarcane to bear the burden caused by the difference between the FRP and SAP.

While Lok Sabha witnessed slogan-shouting by Members of all Opposition parties, a large number of farmers descended on Delhi streets and have laid siege at Jantar Mantar to protest enforcement of uniform cane price.

The farmers' protest in the national capital on the opening day of the winter session of Parliament has thrown traffic out of gear on most arterial roads around Jantar Mantar, including the business district of Rajiv Chowk.

When Lok Sabha resumed at Zero Hour, Opposition Members again rushed to the well of the House, shouting slogans ''stop loot of farmers''.

Party leaders never enter the well of the House but this time, Mr Mulayam Singh Yadav (Samajwadi Party), Mr Ajit Singh (RLD), Mr Sharad Yadav (Janata Dal-United), and Mr Basudeb Acharia (CPM) joined their protesting colleagues there.

When the din continued despite pleas by the Speaker to let the House function, she adjourned it for the day.

Earlier, RLD chief Ajit Singh had said, ''We will not let the House function until the Centre scraps the ordinance.'' The Rajya Sabha, on the other hand, was adjourned for the day after paying respects to sitting Members Pyarelal Khandelwal and Mahendra Sahni, who passed away recently.

Soon after the House assembled at the start of the winter session, Chairman Hamid Ansari paid tributes to the departed leaders by describing Khandelwal (BJP) and Sahni(JD-U) as ''noted Parliamentarians.'' The House also recalled the contributions of late former Minister P Upendra and former Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister YSR Reddy.

Members observed one-minute silence in their memory before the House was adjourned for the day.

Financial express repots:

Senior ministers of the UPA government got into firefighting mode, working behind the scenes on Thursday to approve critical changes in the sugarcane ordinance issued last month. The ordinance has almost led the Centre into a collision course with the states.

According to top UPA sources, the ordinance, that was brought in to sidestep financial liability to the tune of Rs 14,000 crore in the wake of a Supreme Court order on awarding compensation to sugarcane growers, achieved its purpose. But an oversight in its drafting appeared to have transferred this liability to the states.

This aspect was pointed out in the government on Thursday morning by one of the senior ministers, who maintained that unless changes were made in the ordinance, the states could end up having to take responsibility for the difference in compensation sugarcane mill owners must pay to farmers.

The ordinance issued on October 21 through a gazette notification and given ex post approval on October 29 by the Union cabinet states: "If any authority or state government fixes any price above the fair and remunerative price fixed by the central government under clause 3, such authority or state government, shall pay the amount, which it fixes above the fair and remunerative price as fixed by the central government, to the grower of sugarcane or to the sugarcane growers cooperative society, as the case may be".

The ordinance, in its preamble, also says that the state governments announcing higher pricing of levy sugar than that by the Centre would have to bear the extra cost. It says: "And whereas it has become necessary to clarify for certainty and to have a uniform policy and factors to be taken into consideration for the determination of price of levy sugar and also to clarify that state governments declaring the SAP also bear the additional expenditure connected thereto insofar as the impact on price of levy sugar in respect of sugar factories located in those states concerned."

This means that the state government can no longer announce an SAP (state advisory price) for sugarcane higher than the FRP announced by the Centre, unless it is willing to shell out the difference from its own exchequer. States like Uttar Pradesh have always announced higher SAPs bowing to popular sentiment.

This year, UP announced an SAP of Rs 170 per quintal compared to the Rs 129 announced by the Centre last month. Chief Minister...

http://www.financialexpress.com/news/Ire-over-sugar-ordinance-forces-govt-into-firefighting-mode/543799/


Lok Sabha speaker advocates discussion on sugarcane issue

Lok Sabha speaker Meira Kumar today said she shared the Opposition's concern over the problems faced by farmers and they should be discussed. "I shared their (opposition) concern for farmers problems," she said adding "Whatever the problem it should be discussed."


She told reporters outside Parliament, "When the session is on it should be discussed in the House and (that is) what the session is meant for."

The Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha were adjourned following the Opposition uproar over sugarcane pricing policy today. Strongly advocating a discussion, she said "things should be discussed in the House rather than the House be disrupted. It would be better to have discussion."

To a question that allies were saying that they were not consulted before introduction of the Bill, she said "whatever the Bill.... Bill is scheduled" and added that it could be discussed.


Another anti-Maoist offensive in WB after Jharkhand polls: DGP

he West Bengal government is planning to intensify the offensive against Maoists in Lalgarh in West Midnapore district after the Assembly elections in Jharkhand.

"After the Jharkhand elections, we are expecting some additional companies of the paramilitary in our state. Once we get the forces, we will intensify the offensive," state DGP Bhupinder Singh told newsmen here today. He did not, however, specify how many additional companies of central forces would be available for West Bengal after the Jharkhand elections.

West Bengal police and central paramilitary forces began an anti-Maoist offensive in West Midnapore on June 19 this year which is still continuing. In reply to a question, the DGP said the situation in Lalgarh and its adjoining areas was under control, but armed Maoists were still present.

On the night of November 15, suspected Maoists kidnapped five persons, including a gram panchayat member and a CPI-M functionary near Jhargram. While three of them were later released unharmed, two others are still untraced.


Ensure 100 days' sitting of Parliament: CPI(M)

The CPI(M) on Thursday demanded a constitutional amendment to ensure that Parliament sits for at least 100 days a year even if there was no legislative business. This will make the government "accountable to the people", it argued.

"The government's stand that there is no need to have more sittings of Parliament because there is no legislative business amounts to abdicating its constitutional responsibility. Besides making laws, Parliament raises issues of public importance and maintains vigil on the executive," CPI(M) leader Sitaram Yechury said at a press conference here.

Observing that people's will was exercised through the elected representatives in the legislature to which the executive was accountable, he said, "If Parliament does not meet often, the government gets away without being accountable to the people."

He said the CPI(M) would raise the demand in both Houses of Parliament for a constitutional amendment to ensure at least 100 sittings every calendar year.

Yechury said the British Parliament was mandated to hold a minimum of 160 sittings every year and there were nearly 200 sittings on an average. "But here we had only 46 sittings last year. This is a serious undermining of the Constitution."

The CPI(M) leader also objected to the government "going back on its assurance" that the current winter session, which began on Thursday, would be for six weeks.



Sugarcane pricing not discussed at cabinet meeting: Soni

The cabinet meeting Thursday did not discuss the government's sugarcane pricing policy, which has come under attack from opposition parties and farmers.
nformation and Broadcasting Minister Ambika Soni, asked by reporters after the cabinet meeting that was chaired by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, if the issue was discussed, said: "The amendment on sugarcane pricing was not discussed."

However, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh is reported to have called an emergency meeting of the core group of ministers to discuss the issue following disruption of parliament by the opposition protesting the sugarcane pricing.

The meeting was attended by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, Law Minister M. Veerappa Moily and Home Minister P. Chidambaram.

The prime minister has also assured Congress general secretary Rahul Gandhi that the government would suitably amend the ordinance regarding fair and remunerative pricing (FRP) system on sugarcane if it is in the interest of farmers.

Rahul Gandhi met the prime minister here Thursday to convey the sentiments of sugarcane growers of Uttar Pradesh amid efforts by a combined opposition to put the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government in the dock over its ordinance.

"The prime minister has assured him that the centre will look into the matter again and suitably amend the ordinance if it is in the interest of farmers," said a Congress statement issued by party general secretary Digvijay Singh.

The party also assured sugarcane farmers of Uttar Pradesh that the UPA government would "ensure highest possible sugar cane price in the present context".

The government has called an all-party meeting on Monday to discuss the sugarcane pricing, which farmers have termed unfair.

Farmers are protesting the government proposal to table an amendment that will raise the sugarcane prices from about Rs.108 to Rs.129.85 per quintal. They say this is insufficient compared to the rise in sugar prices. They are demanding Rs.280 per quintal for their produce.

The government is also worried after the DMK, its ally, said the government should have taken states into confidence before coming up with the ordinance.

BJP slams Government's new sugarcane pricing, procurement policy

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) on Thursday supported the protesting sugarcane farmers of Uttar Pradesh in their agitation against new sugarcane pricing and procurement policy of the Union Government.
The protest held under the aegis of regional party, Rashtriya Lok Dal led by former Union Industry Minister Ajit Singh, also gained the support of Samajwadi Party and many other political outfits.

Addressing the media on the sidelines of the protest, senior BJP leader Arun Jaitley said that the new sugarcane policy was 'an anti-farmer move.'

'It is an anti-farmer move, the Government wanted to bring a retrospective amendment which could relieve it from its liabilities of mill owners, but in the process it (Government) came under pressure from the mill owners and compensated them by bringing anti-farmer move,' Jaitley said.

'These two provisions must be repealed, this is what we demand from the Government and the entire opposition is opposing it in the parliament. I see no way how this can be passed in the Rajya Sabha,' he added.

The Union Government has announced a price of Rs 129.85 per quintal for sugarcane during the 2009-10 crushing season under FRP (Fair and Remunerative Price) system. In case the State Government fixes SAP (State Advisory Price) higher than the FRP, it will have to pay the difference.

Agitated farmers of the State, which produces half of the country's sugarcane contended that they would intensify their protest if the Government does not fix the rate of sugarcane at Rs 280 per quintal.

Meanwhile, RLD activists also threatened to block the water supply to Delhi from Uttar Pradesh if the Union Government failed to take back sugarcane pricing and procurement policy.

'If the Government will not take back FRP (Fair and Remunerative Price) policy, we will block the supply of water, milk and other essential commodities from Uttar Pradesh. We also held a Panchayat (assembly) in Meerut city, today we will also decide our future strategy,' said Anuradha Chaudhary, senior RLD leader.

Govt. recommends Rs. 7,266 crore for draught hit Bundelkhand region


In a significant step, the Centre on Thursday recommended a special economic package of Rs. 7,266 crore for Bundelkhand region, spread over Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, to help it recover from draught's affect.
The decision was taken during the Union Cabinet meet, presided by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

Briefing mediamen after the Cabinet meet, Information and Broadcasting Minister Ambika Soni said: 'The Cabinet has cleared Rs.7,266 crore package for Bundelkhand region. It was also decided to set up a monitoring group to oversee its implementation.'

The package is hoped to help in the development of the region.

Congress General Secretary had reportedly asked from the Govt. for 7,000 crore package from the Government for the draught hit Bundelkhand region, stated a private channel.

Rahul visited Bundelkhand last year.

Meanwhile, on the issue of sugarcane pricing, the Government will hold an all party meet on Monday.

Tens of thousands of farmers staging a protest on Thursday in the national capital led by Bhartiya Kisan Union, Rashtriya Lok Dal and others.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has reportedly given assurance for necessary amendments in the ordinance related to sugarcane, if required.

Centre disburses Rs.1.38 lakh crore agriculture credits to farmers


The Union Agriculture Ministry said here on Thursday that Rs. 1.38 lakh crore have been disbursed among farmers across the country as agriculture credit up to September.
This is about 42.41 percent of the target fixed for the current fiscal. The target to be achieved during 2009-10 is to the tune of Rs.3.25 lakh crore.

The ministry has stated that it has distributed Rs 92,595.08 crore through commercial banks, Rs27,704.85 crore through cooperative banks, Rs 17,531.31 crore through rural banks.

The flow of agriculture credit since 2003-04 has consistently exceeded the target and increased from Rs.86,981 crore in 2003-04 to Rs.2,87,149 crore in 2008-09.

As advised by the Agriculture Ministry to launch an intensive branch and village level campaign to provide Kisan Credit Card to all the eligible and willing farmers in a time bound manner, the state governments have issued 8.53 crore cards up to July.

To relieve the burden of overdues, the government has waived or given relief to about 3.68 crore farmers through One Time Settlement (OTS) involving an amount of Rs. 65,318.33 crore making them eligible to avail fresh credit from the banking system.

Meanwhile, the government is also implementing revival package for Short-term Rural Cooperative Credit Structure involving financial outlay of Rs. 13,596 crore.

The Center has entered a trilateral agreement with the state governments and the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) and accordingly constituted a Task Force to look into the issue of a large number of farmers, who had taken loans from private moneylenders in the country.

Centre to set up 193 village courts


The Union Government on Thursday announced the setting up of 193 Grama Nyayalayas (village courts) in various states in the current year.
n a written statement to the Lok Sabha, Union Law and Justice Minister, M. Veerappa Moily said: 'The village courts will be set up in the States where the Gram Nyayalayas Act, 2008 applies.'

'The Central Government would bear the non-recurring cost of establishment of Gram Nyayalayas subject to a ceiling of Rs.18.00 lakhs per Gram Nyayalaya,' he said

Moily also informed the lower house that the Central Government would also bear 50 percent of Rs.6.40 lakhs per annum as recurring cost of one Gram Nyayalaya for the first three years.

He said the government has carried out detailed consultations with state governments, high courts and other stakeholders regarding implementation of the Gram Nyayalayas, Act 2008 and its impact on the administration of justice in the states.

Replying another question Moily informed the members that the government has introduced the National Green Tribunal Bill, 2009 in the Lok Sabha in July, which envisages setting up of National Green Tribunal (NGT) for effective and expeditious disposal of cases relating to Environmental protection and conservation of forests and other natural resources.

Meanwhile he also clarified that there is no proposal under consideration of the Centre to open up country's legal sector to foreign law companies.

However, Moily, informed the house that the issue of allowing foreign law firms to establish their officers to give legal advice and assistance on foreign law is being discussed with all the stake holders including the Bar Council of India.

Centre prepares Vision 2015 document for food processing industries


The Union Government on Thursday informed the Lok Sabha that the vision document 2015 has been prepared in order to increase the level of processing and to promote food processing industries to exploit both the domestic and international market potential for processed food products.
In a written statement to the lower house, the Union Food Processing Industries Minister Subhodh Kanth Sahay said: 'The vision document envisages tripling the size of the processed food sector by increasing the level of processing of perishables from 6 percent to 20 percent value addition from 20 percent to 35 percent and share in global food trade from 1.5 percent to 3 percent by 2015.'

The minister also informed the members, that the government has approved an integrated strategy vision to promote agribusiness, strategy and action plan for the food-processing sector.

In his reply, Sahay said the level of processing of fruits and vegetables in the country is estimated at 2.20 percent.

'The low level of fruit and vegetable processing is due to non-availability of processable varieties of raw materials at right quantity and quality, seasonable nature of industry, lack of adequate post-harvest infrastructure such as lack of cold chain facilities, transportation, proper storage facilities etc,' he informed.

It is estimated that the processing level in the food-processing sector has gone up from 6 percent to 10 percent and value addition has gone up from 20 percent to 26 percent during last five years.

Sahay informed the house that the ministry has been implementing various schemes for promotion and development of food processing industries.

He also informed the housed that a National Horticulture Mission has been launched with an objective to boost the horticulture sector.

PM may sign major guns deal during US visit

Josy Joseph / DNA
Thursday, November 19, 2009 0:43 IST
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New Delhi: India is expected to initiate the process for a major government-to-government deal in artillery guns with the United States during the visit of prime minister Manmohan Singh later this month.


If it goes through, it will break the jinx of Bofors that has held back artillery modernisation since the mid-1980s.

According to military sources, work is under way for a foreign military sales deal with the US for the purchase of ultra-light howitzer guns, worth over $1 billion (Rs5,000 crore). A military source said the proposed deal "could be taken forward" during Singh's visit to the US.

If it goes through this will be the first major artillery gun purchase by India since the Bofors scandal, over kickbacks in the purchase of the artillery guns from Sweden, erupted into a political controversy.

Though the proposal is being termed "serious" by sources, many are not willing to commit if it will go through. Singapore Technologies, which had led the race for the contract, has been blacklisted after its name cropped up in a Central Bureau of Investigation probe into alleged corruption by former Ordnance Factory Board chairman Sudipto Ghosh.
However, pleading innocence, the Singapore firm is carrying out intense lobbying at various levels to get back the contract. Army sources are not willing to write off the Singapore firm from the contract.

The army is preparing detailed notes for a deal for the much-needed ultra-light howitzers. The proposal is for outright purchase of M777 towed artillery guns that have shown their capabilities in Afghanistan. It is in service with the US Marine Corps and army, besides the Canadian military.

http://www.dnaindia.com/india/report_pm-may-sign-major-guns-deal-during-us-visit_1313510


Indira Gandhi proved India is not a soft state

ASHOK B SHARMA
Posted: Saturday, Oct 31, 2009 at 1929 hrs IST
Updated: Saturday, Oct 31, 2009 at 1929 hrs IST

New Delhi: Nation remembers the former Prime Minister of India, Indira Gandhi on the day of her martyrdom on October 31, 1984. The determined lady who was once considered as one of the world's powerful leader was the only Prime Minister of the country who proved that India was not a soft state through her actions In the war with Pakistan in 1971 leading to the creation of Bangladesh, annexation of Sikkim in 1975 and suppression of separatist movement in the country.

Another most important reason for which Indira Gandhi needs to be remembered is her bold decision to nationalize leading banks in the country about 40 years ago on July 14, 1969. This proved to be wise and visionary, particularly, today as it insulated the country's banking sector from the direct impact of global financial crisis. These nationalized banks worked under robust oversight and regulations while deepening financial access and markets. After nationalisation of banks a number of unemployed youth received loans for entrepreneurship

It is hard to believe today after 25 years of her death that India could once rebuff political pressure and military threat from the world's most powerful country – the United States of America. The then US President, Richard Nixon disliked Indira Gandhi and referred to her as a 'witch' and a 'clever fox' in his private conversation with the Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger, which was later made public.

In 1971 the Pakistani army heavily cracked down on the civilian population of erstwhile East Pakistan and as a result over 10 million refugees fled to India. The Pakistan military action was in disregard to the election verdict which caused the emergence of Awami League as the single largest party.

The Pakistan military dictatorship under Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan and the then political leaders of West Pakistan apprehended the shifting of political capital from Islamabad to Dhaka or separation of its eastern wing, despite assurances the Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman to resolve the issue within the framework of Pakistan.

The military repression in erstwhile East Pakistan and the flight of refugees brought India into a war with Pakistan. The US mooted a resolution in the United Nations Security Council warning India going to war with Pakistan. Indira Gandhi signed a treaty of friendship and cooperation with the Soviet Union in August 1971 and the Soviet Union vetoed US proposal in the UN.

Indira Gandhi also took measures to...

http://www.financialexpress.com/news/indira-gandhi-proved-india-is-not-a-soft-state/535653/


Farmer suicides haunt Orissa assembly

Subhashish Mohanty / DNA
Thursday, November 19, 2009 23:08 IST
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Bhubaneswar: The Orissa assembly witnessed pandemonium on Thursday. As soon as the day's proceedings began, Congress members rushed to the well of the House and demanded that the legislature make an obituary reference to the over 30 farmers who committed suicide in the state in the past two months due to crop loss. "The assembly must condole," leader of opposition Bhupinder Singh said.


But the treasury benches were not inclined. "Committing suicide is a crime, no obituary motion should be passed without thoroughly examining the laws," they said.

Pandemonium followed and the House was adjourned. Later, the government constituted a farmers' commission to find out the reasons for the crop loss. The panel would suggest measures to enhance the growth ratio of agriculture.


Fissures appear in farmers' front





LUCKNOW: Farmers' unity in UP against low sugarcane price, it seems, is crumbling. Even as a mahapanchayat presided by VM Singh, convener of the


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Rashtriya Kisan Mazdoor Sangathan and Congress leader, held on Wednesday in Lakhimpur Kheri, passed a resolution to conditionally supply sugarcane to mills, a delegation of the National Alliance of Farmers' Association (NAFA) met President Pratibha Patil in Delhi and asked her protect interest of cane farmers.

While farmers, led by Singh, softened their stand and opted for an agreement with mills, majority of them led by Bhartiya Kisan Union are unrelenting. Hundreds of them are in Delhi for past three days demanding scraping of Fair and Remunerative Price (FRP) ordinance and increasing SAP. The Rashtriya Lok Dal along with the Samajwadi Party will lay siege to Parliament on Thursday in protest. The issue will also be raised in winter session of Parliament, also starting from Thursday.

At the mahapanchayat in Palia, Lakhimpur, decision to supply cane was taken on condition that the mills and cane societies will follow the clause provided in the agreement in form C. In the said clause sugar mills agree to pay at par with the highest payment made by any other sugar mill in UP. Singh said that farmers need to vacate field for sowing of wheat. He said, cane leaves will also help in meeting shortage of cattle fodder in the state.

The vice-chairmen of Balarayan and Sampoornanagar factories of Kheri, who were also present in the mahapanchayat, reportedly gave their consent to follow the clause. Farmers decided that they will reach Lucknow on December, 15 to gherao the cane commissioner for declaration of Rs 280 per quintal as State Advisory Price (SAP). Farmers have been demanding Rs 280 per quintal rate, whereas the state government has fixed SAP as Rs 180-185 per quintal.

On the other hand, NAFA delegation led by its patron Prof T Haq met President and gave her a memorandum seeking her intervention to get clause 3B deleted from the FRP ordinance. The clause proposes that state government will have to pay the difference between SAP and FRP to sugar mills. SAP is higher than FRP. The provision, it said, will deter state governments from fixing higher SAP. The delegation also demanded that fixation of from FRP should be more reasonable.

Haq said that UP government should declare Rs 215 per quintal SAP this year so that it can motivate farmers to continue cane farming next year. The NAFA is of the view that Rs 215 per quintal along with bonus is a reasonable price for the sugarcane this year as farmers have suffered heavy losses due to drought. The input cost of farmers has been between Rs 176-210 per quintal in various areas depending on the severity of the drought and other prevailing circumstances.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/lucknow/Fissures-appear-in-farmers-front/articleshow/5245341.cms

sugar

India Parliament Adjourns on Sugar Cane-Price Protest

Bloomberg - Bibhudatta Pradhan, Pratik Parija - ‎1 hour ago‎
19 (Bloomberg) -- India's parliament adjourned for the day as opposition parties protested against the uniform sugar cane price, prolonging a tariff dispute ...

Ire over sugar ordinance forces govt into firefighting mode

Financial Express - ‎50 minutes ago‎
The ordinance, in its preamble, also says that the state governments announcing higher pricing of levy sugar than that by the Centre would have to bear the ...

HC notice to govt on illegal use of kolhus

Times of India - ‎1 hour ago‎
ALLAHABAD: The Allahabad High Court has asked the Uttar Pradesh government, UP Sugar Cooperative Cane Union Federation and others to file their reply in a ...

Indian sugar extends gains on thin supply, demand

Reuters India - ‎Nov 18, 2009‎
MUMBAI, Nov 18 (Reuters) - Tight supplies due to a delay in cane crushing, lower output estimate and improvement in demand helped Indian spot sugar to rise ...

ANALYSIS-Sugar supply seen tight despite plantings boost

Reuters India - David Brough - ‎4 hours ago‎
LONDON, Nov 19 (Reuters) - A doubling of sugar prices this year will trigger a boost in plantings in 2010/11, but the economic crisis and ...
Banks ink Garanti trade deal Trade Finance (subscription)

Winter session Day 1: Sugar tastes bitter, disruption wins over debate

Livemint - Ruhi Tewari - ‎5 hours ago‎
The government's new sugarcane pricing policy left it with a bitter taste in its mouth as the first day of the winter session of Parliament began on a ...

Pakistan expected to start importing sugar by Dec

Reuters India - Augustine Anthony - ‎8 hours ago‎
ISLAMABAD, Nov 19 (Reuters) - Pakistan is likely to start importing 500000 tonnes of white crystal sugar by December to meet domestic ...

Medium sugar recovers on fresh buying, small sugar eases

Economic Times - ‎7 hours ago‎
19 Nov 2009, 1619 hrs IST, PTI MUMBAI: A divergent trend was noticed on the Vashi wholesale Sugar market here on Thursday as medium sugar recovered ...

Nifty breaches 5000; realty, oil & gas, IT, banks drag

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Sugar stocks were seeing huge selling pressure on news of sugar companies yet to begin crushing for the season. There were reports that sugar mill owners ...

Can't get sugar? Try sweets in your tea

Reuters - Faisal Aziz, Robert Birsel - ‎12 hours ago‎
As Pakistanis face an acute shortage of sugar, some families have found an easily available alternative to sweeten their tea: instead of a spoonful of sugar ...

Security tightened at sugar mills in Muzaffarnagar

Indian Express - ‎15 hours ago‎
Security has been tightened at all sugar mills in Muzaffarnagar following threat from agitating farmers over sugarcane price.

Sugar mills told to go into power generation for extra income

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SUGAR MILLS should take advantage of expected high sugar prices in the next two to three years to invest in power generation to earn extra income.
US likely to order more sugar Manila Standard Today

Govt closely watching sugar price - official

Reuters India - Manoj Kumar, Rajesh Kumar Singh - ‎Nov 16, 2009‎
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India, the world's biggest sugar consumer, is keeping a close eye on the prices of the sweetener and would not hesitate to act to rein ...

Company to pay almost $400000 in back overtime

The Associated Press - ‎4 hours ago‎
SUGAR LAND, Texas - The US Labor Department says a British contractor has agreed to pay nearly $400000 in back overtime wages.

Illovo sees higher sugar output, earnings to be flat

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Sugar producer Illovo Sugar expected the group's sugar production for the current season to amount to about 1,7-million tons, 200 000 t higher than the year ...

Sugar Land Mayor Robbed In Driveway - VIDEO

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Sweet! Is Sugar the future of publishing?

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Egypt raises local sugar cane procurement prices

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CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt has raised by 17 percent the price at which it buys sugar cane from local farmers to 234 Egyptian pounds per tonne, the Investment ...

BJP, RJD, SP hit out at Pawar over sugarcane policy

Press Trust of India - ‎7 hours ago‎
"This entire decision (to introduce the Sugarcane Control (Amendment) Order 2009 Ordinance) is to benefit sugar mills.

Consumer Group Asks Government To Scrap Sugar Subsidy

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KUALA LUMPUR, 19 Nov (Bernama) -- The Malaysian Consumers Association (Maconas) has urged the government to scrap the subsidy on sugar which costs about ...

Sugarcane

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Sugar Canes
Cut sugar cane
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Phylum: Magnoliophyta
(unranked): Monocots
(unranked): Commelinids
Order: Poales
Family: Poaceae
Genus: Saccharum
L.
Selected species

Saccharum arundinaceum
Saccharum bengalense[verification needed]
Saccharum edule
Saccharum munja[verification needed]
Saccharum officinarum
Saccharum procerum
Saccharum ravennae
Saccharum robustum
Saccharum sinense
Saccharum spontaneum

Sugarcane, or sugar cane, is any of six to thirty-seven species (depending on taxonomic system) of tall perennial grasses of the genus Saccharum (family Poaceae, tribe Andropogoneae). Native to warm temperate to tropical regions of India and Asia, they have stout, jointed, fibrous stalks that are rich in sugar, and measure two to six meters (six to nineteen feet) tall. All sugar cane species interbreed, and the major commercial cultivars are complex hybrids. Brazil produces about one-third of the world's sugarcane.

Contents

[hide]

[edit] Cultivation and uses

Sugar cane is grown in over 110 countries with an estimated total production of 1,591 million metric tons[1] in 2007, more than six times the output of sugar beet. In 2005, the world's largest producer of sugar cane was Brazil, followed by India.[2] Sugar cane products include table sugar, Falernum, molasses, rum, cachaça (the national spirit of Brazil), and ethanol. The bagasse that remains after sugar cane crushing may be burned to provide heat and electricity. It may also, because of its high cellulose content, serve as raw material for paper, cardboard, and eating utensils that, because they are by-products, may be branded as "environmentally friendly."

[edit] History of sugarcane

For a longer history, see History of sugar.
Map showing sugar cane India as the first sugar cane country, followed by small areas in Africa, and smaller areas in Europe
The diffusion of sugarcane in pre-Islamic times (shown in red), in the medieval Muslim world (green) and by Europeans (violet)[3]

Sugarcane is indigenous to tropical South Asia and Southeast Asia.[4] Different species likely originated in different locations with S. barberi originating in India and S. edule and S. officinarum coming from New Guinea.[4] Crystallized sugar was reported 5,000 years ago in India.

Around the eighth century A.D., Arabs introduced sugar to the Mediterranean, Mesopotamia, Egypt, North Africa, and Spain. By the tenth century, sources state, there was no village in Mesopotamia that did not grow sugar cane.[3] It was among the early crops brought to the Americas by the Portuguese.

Boiling houses in the 17th through 19th centuries converted sugarcane juice into raw sugar. These houses were attached to sugar plantations in the western colonies. Slaves often ran the boiling process, under very poor conditions. Made of cut stone, rectangular boxes of brick or stone served as furnaces with an opening at the bottom to stoke the fire and remove ashes. At the top of each furnace were up to seven copper kettles or boilers, each one smaller and hotter than the previous one. The cane juice began in the largest kettle. The juice was then heated and lime added to remove impurities. The juice was skimmed, then channeled to successively smaller kettles. The last kettle, which was called the 'teache', was where the cane juice became syrup. The next stop was a cooling trough, where the sugar crystals hardened around a sticky core of molasses. This raw sugar was then shoveled from the cooling trough into hogsheads (wooden barrels), and from there into the curing house.

Black and white photo of sugar cane standing in field
A sugar plantation on the island of Réunion in the late 1800s

Sugarcane is still extensively grown in the Caribbean. Christopher Columbus first brought it during his second voyage to the Americas, initially to the island of Hispaniola (modern day Haiti and the Dominican Republic). In colonial times, sugar formed one side of the triangular trade of New World raw materials, European manufactures, and African slaves. France found its sugarcane islands so valuable, it effectively traded its portion of Canada, famously dubbed "a few acres of snow," to Britain for their return of Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Lucia at the end of the Seven Years' War. The Dutch similarly kept Suriname, a sugar colony in South America, instead of seeking the return of the New Netherlands (New York). Cuban sugarcane produced sugar that received price supports from and a guaranteed market in the USSR; the dissolution of that country forced the closure of most of Cuba's sugar industry. Sugarcane remains an important part of the economy of Belize, Barbados, Haiti, along with the Dominican Republic, Guadeloupe, Jamaica, and other islands.

Sugarcane production greatly influenced many tropical Pacific islands, including Okinawa and, most particularly, Hawaiʻi and Fiji. In these islands, sugarcane came to dominate the economic and political landscape after the arrival of powerful European and American agricultural businesses, which promoted immigration of workers from various Asian countries to tend and harvest the crop. Sugar was the dominant factor in diversifying the islands' ethnic makeup, profoundly affecting their politics and society.

Brazil is the biggest grower of sugarcane, which goes for sugar and ethanol for gasoline-ethanol blends (gasohol) for transportation fuel. In India, sugarcane is sold as jaggery, and also refined into sugar, primarily for consumption in tea and sweets, and for the production of alcoholic beverages.

[edit] Cultivation

Photo of standing and fallen cane
Sugar cane field on Madeira

Sugarcane cultivation requires a tropical or subtropical climate, with a minimum of 60 centimetres (24 in) of annual moisture. It is one of the most efficient photosynthesizers in the plant kingdom. It is a C-4 plant, able to convert up to 2 percent of incident solar energy into biomass.[citation needed] In prime growing regions, such as India, Peru, Brazil, Bolivia, Colombia, Australia, Ecuador, Cuba, the Philippines, El Salvador and Hawaii, sugarcane can produce 20 kilograms (44 lb) for each square meter exposed to the sun.[citation needed]

Although sugarcanes produce seeds, modern stem cutting has become the most common reproduction method. Each cutting must contain at least one bud and the cuttings are sometimes hand-planted. In more advanced countries like Australia, billet planting is common. Billets harvested from a mechanical harvester are planted by a machine which opens and recloses the ground. Once planted, a stand can be harvested several times; after each harvest, the cane sends up new stalks, called ratoons. Successive harvests give decreasing yields, eventually justifying replanting. Two to ten harvests may be possible between plantings.[citation needed]

Sugarcane is harvested by hand and mechanically. Hand harvesting accounts for more than half of production, and is dominant in the developing world. In hand harvesting the field is first set on fire. The fire burns dry leaves, and kills any lurking, venomous snakes, without harming the water-rich stalks and roots. Harvesters then cut the cane just above ground-level using cane knives or machetes. A skilled harvester can cut 500 kilograms (1,100 lb) of sugarcane per hour.[citation needed]

Photo of three trailer truck filled with plant cane

Mechanical harvesting uses a sugarcane combine (or chopper harvester), a harvesting machine originally developed in Australia. The Austoft 7000 series was the original modern harvester design that has now been copied by other companies including Cameco and John Deere. The machine cuts the cane at the base of the stalk, strips the leaves and deposits the cane into a transporter, while blowing the thrash back onto the field. Such machines can harvest 100 long tons (100 t) each hour, but machine-harvested cane must rapidly arrive at the processing. Once cut, sugarcane begins to lose its sugar content, and damage to the cane during mechanical harvesting accelerates this decline.

[edit] Pests

The cane grub can inflict substantial reduce yield by eating roots; it can be controlled with Confidor or Lorsban. Other important pests are the larvae of some butterfly/moth species, including the turnip moth, the sugarcane borer (Diatraea saccharalis), the Mexican rice borer (Eoreuma loftini); leaf-cutting ants, termites, spittlebugs (especially Mahanarva fimbriolata and Deois flavopicta), and the beetle Migdolus fryanus also are significant pests. The planthopper insect Eumetopina flavipes acts as a phytoplasma vector, which causes the sugarcane disease ramu stunt[5].

[edit] Processing

Photo of man holding bar that penetrates large tank
Manually extracting juice from sugarcane
Photo of truck
A truck hauls cane to a cane sugar mill in Florida, USA
Photo of highly magnified raw sugar crystals
Sugar crystals
Photo of shorter building with smoke coming out of smokestack next to 5 story office building
The Santa Elisa sugarcane processing plant, one of the largest and oldest in Brazil, is located in Sertãozinho, Brazil
Outdoor photo of series of rectangular metal trays divided by short internal metal sheets
Evaporator with baffled pan and foam dipper for making ribbon cane syrup. Three Rivers Historical Society Museum at Browntown, South Carolina

Traditionally, sugarcane processing requires two stages. Mills extract raw sugar from freshly harvested cane, and sometimes bleach it to make "mill white" sugar for local consumption. Refineries, often located nearer to consumers in North America, Europe, and Japan, then produce refined white sugar, which is 99 percent sucrose. These two stages are slowly merging. Increasing affluence in the sugar-producing tropics increased demand for refined sugar products, driving a trend toward combined milling and refining.

[edit] Milling

Small rail networks are a common method of transporting cane to a mill. Refineries test newly arrived cane for Brix and trash percentage.

The mill washes, chops, and uses revolving knives to shred the cane. Shredded cane is repeatedly mixed with water and crushed between rollers; the collected juices (called garapa in Brazil) contain 10–15 percent sucrose, and the remaining fibrous solids, called bagasse, are burned for fuel. Bagasse makes a sugar mill more than energy self-sufficient; surplus bagasse goes in animal feed, in paper manufacture, or to generate electricity for sale. The cane juice is next mixed with lime to adjust its pH to 7. This mixing arrests sucrose's decay into glucose and fructose, and precipitates some impurities. The mixture then sits, allowing the lime and other suspended solids to settle. The clarified juice is concentrated in a multiple-effect evaporator to make a syrup about 60 percent sucrose by weight. This syrup is further concentrated under vacuum until it becomes supersaturated, and then seeded with crystalline sugar. On cooling, more sugar crystallizes from the syrup. A centrifuge separates the sugar from the molasses. Additional crystallizations extract more sugar; the final residue is called blackstrap.

Raw sugar is yellow to brown. Bubbling sulfur dioxide through the cane juice before evaporation bleaches many color-forming impurities into colorless ones. This sulfitation produces sugar known as "mill white", "plantation white", and "crystal sugar". Such sugar is the most commonly consumed in sugarcane-producing countries.

[edit] Refining

Sugar refining further purifies the raw sugar. It is first mixed with heavy syrup and then centrifuged in a process called 'affination'. Its purpose is to wash away the sugar crystals' outer coating, which is less pure than the crystal interior. The remaining sugar is then dissolved to make a syrup, about 70 percent solids by weight.

The sugar solution is clarified by the addition of phosphoric acid and calcium hydroxide, which combine to precipitate calcium phosphate. The calcium phosphate particles entrap some impurities and absorb others, and then float to the top of the tank, where they can be skimmed off. An alternative to this "phosphatation" technique is 'carbonatation,' which is similar, but uses carbon dioxide and calcium hydroxide to produce a calcium carbonate precipitate.

After filtering any remaining solids, the clarified syrup is decolorized by filtration through activated carbon. Bone char was traditionally used in this role, but its use is no longer common.[citation needed] Some remaining color-forming impurities adsorb to the carbon. The purified syrup is then concentrated to supersaturation and repeatedly crystallized in a vacuum, to produce white refined sugar. As in a sugar mill, the sugar crystals are separated from the molasses by centrifuging. Additional sugar is recovered by blending the remaining syrup with the washings from affination and again crystallizing to produce brown sugar. When no more sugar can be economically recovered, the final molasses still contains 20–30 percent sucrose and 15–25 percent glucose and fructose.

To produce granulated sugar, in which individual grains do not clump, sugar must be dried, first by heating in a rotary dryer, and then by blowing cool air through it for several days.

[edit] Ribbon cane syrup

Ribbon cane is a subtropical type that was once widely grown in the southern United States, as far north as coastal North Carolina. The juice was extracted with horse or mule-powered crushers; the juice was boiled, like maple syrup, in a flat pan, and then used in the syrup form as a food sweetener. It is not currently a commercial crop, but a few growers find ready sales for their product[citation needed]. Most U.S. sugarcane production occurs in Florida and Louisiana, and to a lesser extent in Hawaii and Texas.

[edit] Production

Top Ten Sugarcane Producers — 11 June 2008
Country Production
(Tonnes)
Footnotes
 Brazil 514,079,729
 India 355,520,000
 People's Republic of China 106,316,000
 Thailand 64,365,682
 Pakistan 54,752,000 P
 Mexico 50,680,000
 Colombia 40,000,000 F
 Australia 36,000,000
 United States 27,750,600
 Philippines 25,300,000 F
 World 1,557,664,978 A
P = official figure, F = FAO estimate, * = Unofficial/Semi-official/mirror data, C = Calculated figure
A = Aggregate (may include official, semi-official or estimates);

Source: Food And Agricultural Organization of United Nations: Economic And Social Department: The Statistical Division

In India, the states of Uttar Pradesh (38.57 %), Maharashtra (17.76 %) and Karnataka (12.20 %) lead the nation in sugarcane production[6].

In the United States, sugar cane is grown commercially in Florida, Hawaii, Louisiana, and Texas.[7]

[edit] Cane ethanol

Ethanol is generally available as a by-product of sugar production.

It can be used as a biofuel alternative to gasoline, and is widely used in cars in Brazil. It is a promising alternative to gasoline, and may become the primary product of sugarcane processing, rather than sugar.

A textbook on renewable energy[8] describes the energy transformation:

At present, 75 tons of raw sugar cane are produced annually per hectare in Brazil. The cane delivered to the processing plant is called burned and cropped (b&c), and represents 77% of the mass of the raw cane. The reason for this reduction is that the stalks are separated from the leaves (which are burned and whose ashes are left in the field as fertilizer), and from the roots that remain in the ground to sprout for the next crop. Average cane production is, therefore, 58 tons of b&c per hectare per year.

Each ton of b&c yields 740 kg of juice (135 kg of sucrose and 605 kg of water) and 260 kg of moist bagasse (130 kg of dry bagasse). Since the higher heating value of sucrose is 16.5 MJ/kg, and that of the bagasse is 19.2 MJ/kg, the total heating value of a ton of b&c is 4.7 GJ of which 2.2 GJ come from the sucrose and 2.5 from the bagasse.

Per hectare per year, the biomass produced corresponds to 0.27 TJ. This is equivalent to 0.86 W per square meter. Assuming an average insolation of 225 W per square meter, the photosynthetic efficiency of sugar cane is 0.38%.

The 135 kg of sucrose found in 1 ton of b&c are transformed into 70 liters of ethanol with a combustion energy of 1.7 GJ. The practical sucrose-ethanol conversion efficiency is, therefore, 76% (compare with the theoretical 97%).

One hectare of sugar cane yields 4000 liters of ethanol per year (without any additional energy input, because the bagasse produced exceeds the amount needed to distill the final product). This however does not include the energy used in tilling, transportation, and so on. Thus, the solar energy-to-ethanol conversion efficiency is 0.13%.

[edit] Sugarcane as food

In most countries where sugarcane is cultivated, there are several foods and popular dishes derived directly from it, such as:

  • Raw sugarcane: chewed to extract the juice
  • Sugarcane Juice: Combining fresh juice, extracted by hand or small mills, with a touch of lemon and ice to make a popular drink, known variously as ganne ka rass, guarab, guarapa, guarapo, papelón, aseer asab, Ganna sharbat, mosto and caldo de cana
  • Jaggery: Solidified molasses, known as Gur or Gud in India, traditionally produced by evaporating juice to make a thick sludge and then cooling and molding it in buckets. Modern production partially freeze dry the juice to reduce caramelization and lighten its color. It is used as sweetener in cooking traditional entrees, sweets and desserts.
  • Molasses: as a sweetener and as a syrup accompanying other foods, such as cheese or cookies
  • Rapadura: a candy made of flavored brown sugar in Brazil, which can be consumed in small hard blocks, or in pulverized form (flour), as an add-on to other desserts
  • Rum: especially in the Caribbean
  • Syrup: a traditional sweetener in soft drinks, now largely supplanted (in the US at least) by high-fructose corn syrup, which is less expensive
  • Rock candy: crystalized cane juice

[edit] Nitrogen fixation

Some sugarcane varieties are known to be capable of fixing atmospheric nitrogen in association with a bacterium, Acetobacter diazotrophicus. Unlike legumes and other nitrogen fixing plants which form root nodules in the soil in association with bacteria, Acetobacter diazotrophicus lives within the intercellular spaces of the sugarcane's stem. [9][10]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  • Bailey, L. H. and Bailey, E. Z. 1976. Hortus Third: A Concise Dictionary of Plants Cultivated in the United States and Canada. MacMillan Publishing Company, New York

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External links


Indian Economy Overview


India has been one of the best performers in the world economy in recent years, but rapidly rising inflation and the complexities of running the world's biggest democracy are proving challenging.

India's economy has been one of the stars of global economics in recent years, growing 9.2% in 2007 and 9.6% in 2006. Growth had been supported by markets reforms, huge inflows of FDI, rising foreign exchange reserves, both an IT and real estate boom, and a flourishing capital market.




Like most of the world, however, India is facing testing economic times in 2008. The Reserve Bank of India had set an inflation target of 4%, but by the middle of the year it was running at 11%, the highest level seen for a decade. The rising costs of oil, food and the resources needed for India's construction boom are all playing a part.

India has to compete ever harder in the energy market place in particular and has not been as adept at securing new fossil fuel sources as the Chinese. The Indian Government is looking at alternatives, and has signed a wide-ranging nuclear treaty with the US, in part to gain access to nuclear power plant technology that can reduce its oil thirst. This has proved contentious though, leading to leftist members of the ruling coalition pulling out of the government.

As part of the fight against inflation a tighter monetary policy is expected, but this will help slow the growth of the Indian economy still further, as domestic demand will be dampened. External demand is also slowing, further adding to the downside risks.

The Indian stock market has fallen more than 40% in six months from its January 2008 high. $6b of foreign funds have flowed out of the country in that period, reacting both to slowing economic growth and perceptions that the market was over-valued.

It is not all doom and gloom, however. A growing number of investors feel that the market may now be undervalued and are seeing this as a buying opportunity. If their optimism about the long term health of the Indian economy is correct, then this will be a needed correction rather than a downtrend.

The Indian government certainly hopes that is the case. It views investment in the creaking infrastructure of the country as being a key requirement, and has ear-marked 23.8 trillion rupees, approximately $559 billion, for infrastructure upgrades during the 11th five year plan. It expects to fund 70% of project costs, with the other 30% being supplied by the private sector. Ports, airports, roads and railways are all seen as vital for the Indian Economy and have been targeted for investment.



Further hope comes from the confidence of India's home bred companies. As well as taking over the domestic reins, where they now account for most of the economic activity, they are also increasingly expanding abroad. India has contributed more new members to the Forbes Global 2000 than any other country in the last four years.

Recent Growth Trends in Indian Economy

India's Economy has grown by more than 9% for three years running, and has seen a decade of 7%+ growth. This has reduced poverty by 10%, but with 60% of India's 1.1 billion population living off agriculture and with droughts and floods increasing, poverty alleviation is still a major challenge.

The structural transformation that has been adopted by the national government in recent times has reduced growth constraints and contributed greatly to the overall growth and prosperity of the country. However there are still major issues around federal vs state bureaucracy, corruption and tariffs that require addressing. India's public debt is 58% of GDP according to the CIA World Fact book, and this represents another challenge.

During this period of stable growth, the performance of the Indian service sector has been particularly significant. The growth rate of the service sector was 11.18% in 2007 and now contributes 53% of GDP. The industrial sector grew 10.63% in the same period and is now 29% of GDP. Agriculture is 17% of the Indian economy.

Growth in the manufacturing sector has also complemented the country's excellent growth momentum. The growth rate of the manufacturing sector rose steadily from 8.98% in 2005, to 12% in 2006. The storage and communication sector also registered a significant growth rate of 16.64% in the same year.

Additional factors that have contributed to this robust environment are sustained in investment and high savings rates. As far as the percentage of gross capital formation in GDP is concerned, there has been a significant rise from 22.8% in the fiscal year 2001, to 35.9% in the fiscal year 2006. Further, the gross rate of savings as a proportion to GDP registered solid growth from 23.5% to 34.8% for the same period. G20
India is part of the G-20, Group of Twenty.

Agriculture in India

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
     Rice R     Wheat W     Jowar (Sorghum) J     Bajra (Millet) B     Areas with two predominate crops
Minor crop Areas in India: P Pulses, S Sugarcane, J Jute, Cn Coconut, C Cotton, and T Tea.
The fertile Ganges River Delta—known for severe flooding and tropical cyclones—supports cultivation of jute, tea, and rice. Fisheries are both produced and exported from this region.

Agriculture in India has a long history dating back to ten thousand years.

Today, India ranks second worldwide in farm output. Agriculture and allied sectors like forestry and logging accounted for 16.6% of the GDP in 2007, employed 60% of the total workforce[1] and despite a steady decline of its share in the GDP, is still the largest economic sector and plays a significant role in the overall socio-economic development of India.

India is the largest producer in the world of milk, cashew nuts, coconuts, tea, ginger, turmeric and black pepper.[2] It also has the world's largest cattle population (281 million).[3] It is the second largest producer of wheat, rice, sugar, groundnut and inland fish.[4] It is the third largest producer of tobacco.[4] India accounts for 10% of the world fruit production with first rank in the production of banana and sapota.[4]

India's population is growing faster than its ability to produce rice and wheat.[5]

Contents

[hide]

[edit] Initiatives

The required level of investment for the development of marketing, storage and cold storage infrastructure is estimated to be huge. The government has implemented various schemes to raise investment in marketing infrastructure. Among these schemes are Construction of Rural Go downs, Market Research and Information Network, and Development / Strengthening of Agricultural Marketing Infrastructure, Grading and Standardization.[6]

The Indian Agricultural Research Institute (IARI), established in 1905, was responsible for the research leading to the "Indian Green Revolution" of the 1970s. The Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) is the apex body in agriculture and related allied fields, including research and education.[7] The Union Minister of Agriculture is the President of the ICAR. The Indian Agricultural Statistics Research Institute develops new techniques for the design of agricultural experiments, analyses data in agriculture, and specializes in statistical techniques for animal and plant breeding. Prof. M.S. Swaminathan is known as "Father of the Green Revolution" and heads the MS Swaminathan Research Foundation.[8] He is known for his advocacy of environmentally sustainable agriculture and sustainable food security.

[edit] Different types of Agriculture

There are 10 types of agriculture in India

  1. shifting agriculture
  2. subsistence farming
  3. intensive agriculture
  4. extensive agriculture
  5. commercial agriculture
  6. plantation agriculture
  7. mixed farming
  8. monoculture
  9. dry farming
  10. crop rotation

[edit] Problems

Slow agricultural growth is a concern for policymakers as some two-thirds of India's people depend on rural employment for a living. Current agricultural practices are neither economically nor environmentally sustainable and India's yields for many agricultural commodities are low. Poorly maintained irrigation systems and almost universal lack of good extension services are among the factors responsible. Farmers' access to markets is hampered by poor roads, rudimentary market infrastructure, and excessive regulation.
—World Bank: "India Country Overview 2008"[9]

The low productivity in India is a result of the following factors:

  • According to World Bank's "India: Priorities for Agriculture and Rural Development", India's large agricultural subsidies are hampering productivity-enhancing investment. Overregulation of agriculture has increased costs, price risks and uncertainty. Government intervenes in labor, land, and credit markets. India has inadequate infrastructure and services.[10] World Bank also says that the allocation of water is inefficient, unsustainable and inequitable. The irrigation infrastructure is deteriorating.[10]
  • Illiteracy, general socio-economic backwardness, slow progress in implementing land reforms and inadequate or inefficient finance and marketing services for farm produce.
  • The average size of land holdings is very small (less than 20,000 m²) and is subject to fragmentation, due to land ceiling acts and in some cases, family disputes. Such small holdings are often over-manned, resulting in disguised unemployment and low productivity of labour.
  • Adoption of modern agricultural practices and use of technology is inadequate, hampered by ignorance of such practices, high costs and impracticality in the case of small land holdings.
  • Irrigation facilities are inadequate, as revealed by the fact that only 52.6% of the land was irrigated in 2003–04,[11] which result in farmers still being dependent on rainfall, specifically the Monsoon season. A good monsoon results in a robust growth for the economy as a whole, while a poor monsoon leads to a sluggish growth.[12] Farm credit is regulated by NABARD, which is the statutory apex agent for rural development in the subcontinent. At the same time overpumping made possible by subsidized electric power is leading to an alarming drop in aquifer levels.[13][14][15]

[edit] History

Indian agriculture began by 9000 BCE as a result of early cultivation of plants, and domestication of crops and animals.[16] Settled life soon followed with implements and techniques being developed for agriculture.[17][18] Double monsoons led to two harvests being reaped in one year.[19] Indian products soon reached the world via existing trading networks and foreign crops were introduced to India.[19][20] Plants and animals—considered essential to their survival by the Indians—came to be worshiped and venerated.[21]

The middle ages saw irrigation channels reach a new level of sophistication in India and Indian crops affecting the economies of other regions of the world under Islamic patronage.[22][23] Land and water management systems were developed with an aim of providing uniform growth.[24][25] Despite some stagnation during the later modern era the independent Republic of India was able to develop a comprehensive agricultural program.[26][27]

[edit] See also

[edit] Gallery

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "CIA Factbook: India". CIA Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/in.html. Retrieved 2008-06-10. 
  2. ^ Agriculture sector Indo British Partnership network, Retrieved on December 2007
  3. ^ Lester R. Brown World's Rangelands Deteriorating Under Mounting Pressure Earth Policy Institute, Retrieved on- February 2008
  4. ^ a b c Indian agriculture Agribusiness Information Centre, Retrieved on- February 2008
  5. ^ "The Food Chain in Fertile India, Growth Outstrips Agriculture". New York Times. 22 June 2008. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/22/business/22indiafood.html?_r=1. 
  6. ^ Agriculture marketing india.gov Retrieved on- February 2008
  7. ^ Objectives Indian agricultural research institute, Retrieved on December 2007
  8. ^ MS Swaminathan Times Inc. Retrieved on- 21 February, 2008
  9. ^ "India Country Overview 2008". World Bank. 2008. http://www.worldbank.org.in/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/SOUTHASIAEXT/INDIAEXTN/0,,contentMDK:20195738~menuPK:295591~pagePK:141137~piPK:141127~theSitePK:295584,00.html. 
  10. ^ a b "India: Priorities for Agriculture and Rural Development". World Bank. http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/SOUTHASIAEXT/EXTSAREGTOPAGRI/0,,contentMDK:20273764~menuPK:548214~pagePK:34004173~piPK:34003707~theSitePK:452766,00.html. 
  11. ^ Multiple authors (2004). Agricultural Statistics at a Glance 2004. http://dacnet.nic.in/eands/4.6(a)All%20lndia%20Area,%20Production%20and%20Yield%20of%20Rice.xls. 
  12. ^ Sankaran, S. "28". Indian Economy: Problems, Policies and Development. pp. 492–493. 
  13. ^ Satellites Unlock Secret To Northern India's Vanishing Water
  14. ^ Columbia Conference on Water Security in India
  15. ^ Keepers of the spring: reclaiming our water in an age of globalization, By Fred Pearce, page 77.
  16. ^ Gupta, page 54
  17. ^ Harris & Gosden, page 385
  18. ^ Lal, R. (August 2001), "Thematic evolution of ISTRO: transition in scientific issues and research focus from 1955 to 2000", Soil and Tillage Research 61 (1-2): 3–12 [3], doi:10.1016/S0167-1987(01)00184-2 
  19. ^ a b agriculture, history of. Encyclopedia Britannica 2008.
  20. ^ Shaffer, pages 310-311
  21. ^ Gupta, page 57
  22. ^ Iqtidar Husain Siddiqui, "Water Works and Irrigation System in India during Pre-Mughal Times", Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, Vol. 29, No. 1 (Feb., 1986), pp. 52–77.
  23. ^ Shaffer, page 315
  24. ^ Palat, page 63
  25. ^ Kumar, page 182
  26. ^ Roy 2006
  27. ^ Kumar 2006

[edit] External links



Charan Singh

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Chaudhary Charan Singh

In office
28 July 1979 – 14 January 1980
Preceded by Morarji Desai
Succeeded by Indira Gandhi

Born 23 December 1902(1902-12-23)
Noorpur, United Provinces, British India
Died 29 May 1987 (aged 84)
Political party Janata Party
Spouse(s) Gayatri Devi
Religion Hindu
Signature

Chaudhary Charan Singh (Hindi: चौधरी चरण सिंह Caudharī Caraṇ Siṅh; 23 December 1902 – 29 May 1987) was the sixth Prime Minister of the Republic of India, serving from 28 July 1979 until 14 January 1980.

Born into a Aryan Kshatriya Jaat family of Tevatia clan in 1902[1][2], Charan Singh entered politics as part of the Independence Movement. After independence he became particularly notable in the 1950s for opposing and winning a battle against Nehru's socialistic and collectivist land use policies, for the sake of the Indian Farmer, which endeared him to the agrarian communities throughout the nation, particularly in his native Uttar Pradesh.

The leader of the Bharatiya Lok Dal, a major constituent of the Janata coalition, he was disappointed in his ambition to become Prime Minister in 1977 by Jayaprakash Narayan's choice of Morarji Desai. He settled at the time for the largely honorary post of Deputy Prime Minister of India. However, the internal stresses of the coalition's government caused him to leave the government with the former Lok Dal, after being promised by Mrs. Gandhi the support of the Congress Party on the floor of the House in any efforts to form a government. He was sworn in as Prime Minister with the support of just 64 MPs.

During his term as Prime Minister the Lok Sabha never met. The day before the Lok Sabha was due to meet for the first time the Indian National Congress withdrew their support from his Bharatiya Lok Dal Government. Choudhary Charan Singh resigned and fresh elections were held six months later.

He continued to lead the Lok Dal in opposition till his death in 1987, when he was succeeded as party president by his son Ajit Singh. His association with the causes dear to farming communities in the North caused his memorial in New Delhi to be named Kisan Ghat. (In Hindi, Kisan is the word for farmer.)

The university of Meerut city in Uttar Pradesh, India, is named after him (Chaudhary Charan Singh University).

Contents

[hide]

[edit] Early Years - Pre Independence India

Charan Singh's ancestor was the prominent leader of the Indian Rebellion of 1857, Raja Nahar Singh of Ballabhgarh (in present day Haryana). Maharaja Nahar Singh was sent to the gallows in Chandni Chowk, Delhi. In order to escape the oppression from the British Government following their defeat, the Maharaja's followers, including Charan Singh's grandfather moved eastward to district Bulandshaher in Uttar Pradesh.

Charan Singh was born on 23 December 1902 in village Noorpur, town Hapur, Ghaziabad district of Uttar Pradesh. He was a good student, and received a Masters of Arts degree in 1925 and Law degree in 1926 from "Meerut" University.

In February 1937 he was elected Chhaprouli (Baghpat) to the Legislative Assembly of Uttar Pradesh (United Provinces) at the age of 34. In 1938 he introduced an Agricultural Produce Market Bill in the Assembly which was published in the issues of The Hindustan Times of Delhi dated 31 March 1938. The Bill was intended to safeguard the interests of the farmers against the rapacity of the traders. The Bill was adopted by most of the States in India, Punjab being the first state to do so in 1940.

Charan Singh followed Mahatma Gandhi in non-violent struggle for independence from the British Government, and was imprisoned several times. In 1930 he was sent to jail for 6 months by the British for contravention of the salt laws. He was jailed again for one year in November 1940 for individual Satyagraha Movement. In August 1942 he was jailed again by the British under DIR and released in November 1943.

[edit] Independent India

In 1952, he became the Revenue Minister of state of Uttar Pradesh, the most populous state in independent India. He was dedicated to enforcing and implementing the provisions of the Zamindari Abolition and Land Reform Act of which he was the major architect. It has been argued by leading political scientists that success of Indian Democracy lies in successful implementation of this reform. Pakistan on the other hand did not have similar reforms, and the power is concentrated amongst the few powerful landlords or Zamindar who run their lands as their private fiefdom, and use their influence to further their wealth.

Charan Singh opposed Nehru on his Soviet Style Economic reform. Charan Singh was of the opinion that cooperative farms would not succeed in India. Being a son of a farmer, Charan Singh opined that the right of ownership was important to the farmer in remaining a cultivator. Charan Singh's political career suffered due to his open criticism of Nehru's economic policy.

Charan Singh left the Congress party in 1967, and formed his own political party. With the help and support of Raj Narain and Dr Ram Manohar Lohiya, he became Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh in 1967, and later in 1970. In 1975, he was jailed again, but this time by then Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, daughter of his former rival Nehru. She had declared the state of 'Indian Emergency (1975-1977)' and jailed all her political opponents. The Indian populace voted her out, and the opposition party, of which Chaudhary Charan Singh was a senior leader came into power. He served as Deputy prime minister and home minister in Janata government headed by Morarji Desai.

He became Prime Minister in 1979 after Morarji Desai. His speech to the nation on India's Independence Day (15 August 1979) was very prophetic in which he identified Pakistan's nuclear ambition as a major threat to India. He also mentioned that Indian labour laws had to be refined if India were to become competitive in world economy. He also opened high level diplomatic relations with Israel, which Indira Gandhi's government which took office following the 1980 elections curtailed.'

Charan Singh died on 29 May 1987. He was survived by his wife, Gayatri Devi and 6 children. His grandson Jayant Chaudhary is recently elected to 15th Lok Sabha from Mathura

Charan Singh has written several books. Some of them are:

  • India's Economic Policy - The Gandhian Blueprint
  • Economic Nightmare of India - Its Cause and Cure
  • Cooperative Farming X-rayed

[edit] Timeline

Political offices
Preceded by
Chandra Bhanu Gupta
Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh
03 April 196725 February 1968
Succeeded by
Chandra Bhanu Gupta
Preceded by
Chandra Bhanu Gupta
Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh
18 February 197002 October 1970
Succeeded by
President's Rule
Administered by the Governor of Uttar Pradesh,
Dr Bezwada Gopala Reddy
title/post subsequently held by
Tribhuvana Narayana Singh
Preceded by
H. M. Patel
Finance Minister of India
19791980
Succeeded by
R. Venkataraman
Preceded by
Morarji Desai
Prime Minister of India
19791980
Succeeded by
Indira Gandhi

[edit] References


Mahendra Singh Tikait

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'Mahendra Singh Tikait' is a popular Indian leader of farmer's from Western Uttar Pradesh in India. He was born in 1935 at village Sisauli in Muzaffarnagar District of Uttar Pradesh, India. He is a Jat of Raghuvanshi gotra. He is Choudhary of Balyan Khap. Tikait was a "Title" conferred to Head of Baliyan Khap by ruler of Thanesar, Raja Harshavardhana, in 7th century. From the time of Raja Harshvardhan the title 'Tikait' is being used by the Choudhary of Balyan Khap, along with his name, way down to generations. He inherited the Chaudharyship of the Khap Baliyan at the age of eight when his father Ch. Chauhal Singh died in 1943.


Chaudhary of Baliyan Khap

The Chaudharyship of the Baliyan khap had been vesting in his family for the last thirteen centuries. The chaudharyship of a khap panchayat is a hereditary position. A Chaudhary enjoys administrative, adjudicative and executive powers over the khap villages. The chaudhary is held in high esteem and his decisions are binding on his people. At a panchayat meeting of the khap Baliyan held at Sisauli on May 12, 1941, a resolution was passed which said : " We will work with our body, heart and soul under the leadership of our Chaudhary for the good of our Khap. Towards this end the Chaudhary of a khap has the right even to demand our lives."Thus the Chaudahry of a khap panchayat enjoys supreme powers.


Leader of Farmers and Peasants

He is a farmer leader and President of Bharatiya Kisan Union. He has led a number of mass Kisan movements against the state and central governments in India to support the rights of the farmers. He lead many international delegations with him around the globe.The character of Kisan movements since the 1970s has been a matter of considerable debate.Bhartiya Kisan Union(BKU)works in close cooperations with international organizations like La Via Campesina,Farmers Coordination Committee India etc.

The BKU received national attention in 1988,when its supporters organised a virtual siege in Meerut in pursuit of higher prices for Sugarcane, cancellation of loans and lowering of water and electricity rates.

In 2006, around one lakh farmers were in Mumbai during heavy rains to protest against Government's WTO and anti-farmers policies.A memorandum addressed to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was released urging to keep agriculture out of WTO. Mahendra Singh Tikait, president of BKU said " It does not matter how much it rains here. We will not stop our fight.The Government will have to hear us. We need a change of Policies".

There is a need of the hour to make reforms in Agricultural Sector. It is a high-time to correct the rotten-mess of mandis which have created because of badly-implemented government policies.Small farmers and peasants-two third of humanity are the endangered species in the agenda and corporatized agriculture. The policies of corporate-driven globalised and industrialized deliberately destroy small farmers, making them disposable. The Indian Peasantry, the largest body of surviving small farmers in the world, today faces a crisis of extinction......That is the voice Bharatiya Kisan Union(BKU) raised at national platform!!!


Rise of Bhartiya Kisan Union:

Poverty and Lack of Political power was a constant theme in the discourse of Tikait, the leader of Kisan Union.After the death of former Prime Minister of India late Ch.Charan Singh(1979-80)in western U.P. he was called the second 'messiah' of kisans. On 17 October 1986 he formed a non-political organization named 'Bhartiya Kisan Union(BKU)' to protect the interests of all the farmers of India who form an overwhelming majority in the population of the country.

One journalist asked him "Whether the Kisan Union also represnted the land-less labourers, Tikait attempted to side-step the question by saying": There is no Mazdoor(Labourers) as such. We are all labourers...Some are big labourers, some are small...Who is the rich farmer? There is no rich farmer.The house we are sitting in belongs to a farmer who is considered the third richest in this village of 20,000 people.And yet he does not have even 18 acres of land-the ceiling".

One thing is very certain that Ch. Mahendra Singh Tikait has been eminently successful in Western Uttar Pradesh.




Mahendra Singh Tikait-Rural Agitation and Farmer's Movement:

One of the reasons Ch. Tikait attracted so much was his firm rural mentality which BKU and Tikait seemingly exhibited. This apparently came when Urban Intellectuals establishing a dialogue with him and the farmers. He has shunned and ridiculed political parties.They(BKU) pursued their mass protests such as demonstrations, sit-ins,and passive resistance...(dharnas and gherao) to mobilise mass movements of farmers and yet has achieved repeated success.The farmers in West UP..the villages adjoining his village has not paid electricity bills for a long time and they have not been penalised by the sucessive governments.


Remarks against Mayawati:

Ch.Tikait was arrested and later released on bail on April 2, 2008 for allegedly making derogatory and caste based remarks against Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati at a rally in Bijnore on March 30, 2008 [1]. Almost 6000 men from the security forces had surrounded Tikait in his village since April 1. The entire row sparked off after Tikait had referred to Mayawti by her caste.


Farmers plan protest march against talks: Thousands of farmers, under the banner of the Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU), are expected to take part in a protest march on Thursday against India hosting an informal WTO meeting in the Capital, BKU said on Wednesday

[2]


Only whores choose their partners:Recent Controversy

Tikait famously told that "Only whores choose their partners".[3]

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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