9,
December 2020 Indian Farmers revolt
Indian
farmers are angry with Prime Minister’s Modi’s policies of neoliberalism and inequality.
Hundreds of thousands marched in New Delhi demanding repeal of new laws that
maintain agricultural products at historic lows. This is a complete betrayal of
promises made to famers in the 2014 election.
In a bid to win over farmers,
Modi's Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) said in its 2014 general election manifesto that all crop prices should
be fixed at a minimum of 50% higher than the production costs. In 2016, Modi
promised to boost the country's agriculture sector with a target of doubling
the income of farmers by 2022. Agriculture is the main source of income for more than
half of India’s 1.3 billion people. Many
farmers are no longer able to maintain a living wage and have been driven into bankruptcy
and suicide. An estimated 250 million workers participated in the strike making
it the largest strike in the world. Police beat back peaceful demonstrators, many
in their late sixties and seventies, with lathes and water cannons in the freezing
cold weather.
This
comes as COVID rages through India, which has reported
more cases than any country in the world outside the United States. India’s
working class endorsed the demands of the farmers.
Many
artists and poets returned their civilian awards. Punjab’s famous athletes sent
their medals to Modi in solidarity with the farmers. It was a tremendous show
of unity and solidarity, when millions of workers were saying, “We are with the
farmers.”
With
unemployment hovering around 27% many farmers are unable to survive. In just
two years, from 2018 to 2019, over 20,000 farmers died by suicide. Meanwhile
the richest man in India, Mukesh Ambani, made $12 million an hour since the
lockdown began. The farmers’ agitation rattled the Modi government prompting
them to imprison opposition leaders. The
chief minister of Delhi, Mr. Kejriwal has openly come out in support of the farmers’
demands to roll back Mr. Modi’s agricultural policies. India’s tone deaf, Prime Minister, Narendra Modi dismissed
the protests as a “conspiracy by the opposition.” Little wonder Modi and Donald
Trump became such bosom friends. The autocratic Modi doesn’t
seem to have learned from his heavy handed polices. Let us hope the powerful
voices of India’s courageous farmers will change his mind. To introduce such
unpopular polices during raging pandemic is excessive cruel and short-sighted.
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