DECLARATION OF 3RD KISAN SWARAJ SAMMELAN
Hyderabad,
April 3rd 2016
INCOME GUARANTEE, RIGHTS OVER RESOURCES
& SUSTAINABILITY IN AGRICULTURE
We, the delegates of the 3rd
Kisan Swaraj Sammelan in Hyderabad during April 1st to 3rd
2016, belonging to numerous people’s movements, farmers’ unions, farmers’
cooperatives, non-governmental organisations and national/regional/state level
alliances working on farming related issues, have come together at a time when
Indian farming is reeling under severe distress as manifested in unabated farm
suicides, increasing debt burden, large displacement of cultivators and serious
depletion of groundwater, soil health and biodiversity.
With a strong belief that without
protecting and promoting sustainable farm livelihoods as opposed to the
increasing corporatization being supported and promoted, the nation’s food
security will be threatened, and given that Constitutional commitments to Right
to Life and Right to Equality cannot be fulfilled without addressing
fundamental concerns relating to farmers[1],
we declare the following:
·
Income
Guarantee: We demand a comprehensive Farmers’ Income Guarantee Act which
assures an income level that achieves dignified living for every agricultural
household including tenant farmers, sharecroppers and agricultural workers. In
its Budget Speech, the government announced that it will work towards income
security for farmers, but its promise of doubling farm incomes by 2022 is
hollow and inadequate. We demand that along the lines of the 7th Pay
Commission, a permanent Farmers’ Income Commission be put in place to ensure
parity of incomes in Indian society. All government policies that impact
agriculture – including support prices, marketing, credit, disaster relief and
insurance, subsidies, trade and export-import policies – should translate into
ensuring incomes for dignified living and sustainability in farming.
·
Relief and
Insurance against Natural Calamities: As more than half of the country is
reeling under consecutive years of drought and other natural disasters, highest
priority should be given to ensure that farmers don’t fall into extreme
distress and debt at times of such natural calamities. The Pradhan Mantri Fasal
Bima Yojana fails to address serious faults in the crop insurance system. We
demand a comprehensive revamp of the Bima Yojana along the lines demanded by
farmer unions (such as making individual farms as assessment units, covering
all risks including wild animal attacks, stopping corporatization of this sector
and ensuring that all cultivators
including sharecroppers/tenants are brought under the scheme), and a timely
disaster relief system that comprehensively covers the loss incurred. There
should be an automatic re-scheduling of bank loans. It is important to
institute systems that also compensate agricultural workers for the impacts
they suffer. In view of drastic climate change, disaster proofing, preparedness
and diversity-based low-external input climate-resilient ecological agriculture
should receive highest-priority.
·
Land
Rights and Acquisition: The
widespread land grab in the name of infrastructure and industry, running into
crores of acres across the country, forms the biggest threat to agriculture and
farm livelihoods and Adivasis are the worst affected. This needs to be stopped
immediately. We demand that Land Acquisition Act 2013 be amended to address
serious shortcomings that exist – primacy of prior informed consent of Gram
Sabhas should be upheld in all cases. We oppose the dilution in rules and
bypassing of the 2013 Act through Government Orders and methods such as Land
Pooling. Rather than creating land banks to give land to the corporates, land
should be given to landless cultivators which is a bigger “public purpose” and
government should ensure that land that has not been put to use for the stated
purpose should be returned to the original landowners. Further, no land
acquisition should take place from assigned landholders. We demand a
comprehensive Land Use policy, statutorily embedded, that prevents and stops
diversion of agricultural land and commons that form the basis of millions of
livelihoods, to non-agricultural purposes.
·
Tenant
Farmers’ Rights and Recognition of Actual Cultivators: Tenant farmers, sharecroppers and women farmers are the worst
affected in the agrarian crisis because they are left out of all the government
support systems including low-interest bank loans, disaster relief, crop
insurance, marketing systems, subsidies etc. There should be a comprehensive
system of formally recording and recognizing the real cultivators including
tenant farmers, sharecroppers and women farmers, so that they are entitled to get
the benefit of all government support systems and schemes.
·
Seed
Sovereignty: Farmers’ seed sovereignty is a critical aspect of livelihood
and food/nutrition security. While we welcome the recent order restricting the
prices of Bt cotton seed, we demand that royalties on seed be completely
abolished even if it means that MNCs leave India. We oppose Intellectual Property
Rights on seed, and the fact that India has embedded Farmers’ Rights in an IPR
law. We demand that seed diversity be revived in farmers’ fields. The Seeds
Bill should be enacted incorporating all necessary provisions that will protect
farmers’ interests.
·
Hazardous
technologies like Pesticides & GMOs: An important reason for agrarian
distress is the use of hazardous and unsustainable farm technologies like
chemical pesticides including herbicides, fertilisers and Genetically Modified
Organisms (GMOs) in the guise of modern agriculture, ignoring post-modern
science of agro-ecology which provides greater viability and sustainability in
agriculture. Introducing Green Revolution paradigm in Eastern India is
unacceptable to us, and BGREI investments should be diverted to promotion of
ecological agriculture. We demand that the government phase out agri-chemicals
in a time bound commitment, and stop any environmental release of GMOs. The
government should put an immediate halt to the processing of the application
for commercialization of GM mustard.
·
Women
Farmers’ Rights: Women farmers have been rendered invisible and unsupported
despite performing 70% of work in Indian agriculture, and despite evidence that
when treated on part with male farmers, women’s farming will improve production
by upto 40%. We demand that governments recognize them as farmers in their own
right, secure their rights over resources both individual and commons, entitle
them to agricultural services on par with male farmers, provide comprehensive
social protection, ensure equal wages and guarantee equal space for women
farmers in all decision-making bodies related to agriculture.
·
Ecological
Agriculture: Ecological agriculture is no longer a choice but an
imperative, given the damage to environment and health across India. There is
also an economic and social imperative for decisively shifting towards such
farming. We welcome recent positive initiatives by some governments in this
respect but they should go beyond treating organic farming as yet another
scheme, that too with meager investments. We demand that agro-ecological approaches
be mainstreamed into Indian agriculture in its agriculture education, research,
extension and marketing support systems. All states should adopt organic
farming policies with public consultation in a time bound manner, to enable
large investments to support production and marketing of organic produce, as
well as instituting incentives like Ecosystems Services payment to ecological
farmers. Organic produce should be channeled into various food schemes of the
governments in a localized fashion.
·
Water
Conservation: Water is a
critical input that is getting fast-depleted and polluted all over India. We
demand concrete measures for water conservation, and preventing the resource
from being privatized. Water-intensive crops should be de-prioritised and any
diversion of water to industry at the expense of agriculture should be stopped.
·
Adivasi
Agriculture: We demand that the Forest Rights Act should be implemented
fully and effectively with particular emphasis on community rights. Respecting
the importance of Adivasi knowledge, diversity and way of life, interventions
in agriculture should be re-oriented towards reviving the earlier continuum
between Nature-Agriculture-Community- Culture. Food security and forest policies
should recognize and support the fact that forests are important food producing
habitats for these communities.
·
Free
Trade Agreements and WTO: International trade policies and agreements are
heavily rigged and tilted against the interests of our farmers. We demand that
India’s ratification and positioning in various negotiations cannot happen
without widespread consultations with farmers, and should in no way compromise food
and livelihood security, and should prioritise farmers’ interests in decisions
taken related to export-import policies. We demand that until India finds a
permanent solution to our ‘food stockpiling’ issue in the WTO which is also directly connected to MSPs and procurement support
offered to farmers, the government should not move forward on negotiations on
any other issues. We demand that the government stop signing any new Free Trade
Agreements, and review all FTAs and BITs until now, to assess how farmers have
been affected. India should force a review of TRIPS Agreement to ensure that
livelihood and trade security is not compromised in the name of IPRs.
·
Support
to farmers’ organisations: Based on principles of cooperation and
aggregation at the community level, adequate support should be provided to organizing
farmers into Farmer Producer Organisations. Such organisations should be
supported with land as well as appropriate support for setting up agro-based
industries and enterprises at the village level, and tax exemptions should be
provided to these collectives.
·
Relief
and Rehabilitation for Farm Suicide Families: Addressing the relief
and rehabilitation needs in farm suicide families has to be taken up by
governments promptly and comprehensively.
We also hereby
announce that to achieve the above, through peaceful and democratic means, we
would all work in a coordinated fashion by evolving common plans and
strategies, even as we take up actions through various organizational
platforms. Creation of informed debates and decentralized action would form a
core of future action. We will hold governments accountable towards upholding
Constitutional commitments as they pertain to Indian farmers. We recognize and
appreciate that many urban Indians are seriously concerned about their food
safety and diversity as well as farm livelihoods. We give a call not only to
the farmers of the nation but all citizens to join the struggle to take forward
the agenda of food and livelihood security and sovereignty of Indian farmers.
KISAN SWARAJ SAMMELAN PARTICIPANTS INCLUDE:
1. Ms
Medha Patkar, National Alliance for People’s Movements (NAPM)
2. Dr
Devinder Sharma, Kisan Ekta
3. Prof
Yogendra Yadav, Jai Kisan Andolan
4. Dr
K Sunilam, Bhoomi Adhikar Sangharsh
5. Dr
Vijoo Krishnan, All India Kisan Sabha
6. Dr
V Rukmini Rao, Mahila Kisan Adhikaar Manch
7. Prof
Kodandaram, Telangana Raithu JAC
8. Shri
Ajayvir Jakhar, Bharat Krishak Samaj
9. Shri
Chamarasa Patil, Karnataka Rajya Raitha Sangha
10. Shri
Rampal Jat, Kisan Mahapanchayat
11. Shri
Lingaraj Pradhan, Paschim Odisha Krishak Sanghatan
12. Shri
Nallagounder, Tamizhaga Vyavasayigal Sangam
13. Shri
Vadde Sobhaneedreeswara Rao, former Agriculture Minister, Andhra Pradesh
14. Shri
Benny Antony, Haritha Sena
15. Shri
Prafulbhai Senjalia, Bharatiya Kisan Sangh, Gujarat
16. Shri
Subhash Sharma, OFAI
17. Shri
P S Ajay Kumar, AP Vyavasaya Vruthidarula Union
18. Shri
Achutaramaiah, All India Kisan Mazdoor Sabha
19. Shri
Kiran Vissa, Dr G V Ramanjaneyulu & Shri Ravi Kanneganti, Rythu mSwarajya
Vedika
20. Ms
Kavitha Kuruganti and Shri Kapil Shah, Alliance for Sustainable & Holistic
Agriculture (ASHA)
And hundreds of other organisations and individuals
[1] We
adopt an expansive definition of Farmers as embedded in the National Policy for
Farmers 2007, and we adopt a more specific focus on the most marginalized
amongst Indian farmers, including agricultural workers, women farmers etc. Additionally,
we also adopt an approach that recognizes farmers as highly skilled.
http://www.kisanswaraj.in/ 2016/04/04/declaration-of-3rd- kisan-swaraj-sammelan- hyderabad/
http://www.kisanswaraj.in/
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