1.
Mon Jun 16, 2008 5:16 pm (PDT)
An Article on Water is being sent to you . I hope you find this India
Together article
useful.
http://www.indiatogether.com/2008/jun/env-borewell.htm
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2.
Coming Water Wars
Posted by: "Dr.V.N. Sharma" [EMAIL PROTECTED]   vns44
Mon Jun 16, 2008 5:18 pm (PDT)
Read in the link (though a bit old)
http://www.indiatogether.com/2005/may/psa-waterwarmh.htm


-- 
Dr.V.N.Sharma


08 May 2005 "So far, farmers without irrigation have been committing suicide," 
says Vijay Jawandia. "Now irrigated farmers, too, will join them in taking 
their lives." Jawandia, a kisan leader of Maharashtra's Vidharbha region, says 
the recently passed Maharashtra Water Resources Regulatory Bill is "simply not 
workable." The Bill signals huge hikes in water charges and irrigation costs. 
The Regulatory Authority it sets up will have three full-time members. Not one 
of them is required to be a farmer. 
Elected panchayats are sidelined on water issues. Farmers with more than two 
children will pay one and a half times the high new rates. And in some regions, 
costly drip and sprinkler irrigation will become mandatory. Breaking these laws 
invites six months in prison and a fine of ten times the annual water charges. 

Shock and anger 

Farmers greeted news of the bill with shock and anger across Vidharbha. This is 
one of the least irrigated and most backward regions of Maharashtra. One that 
has seen hundreds of farmers' suicides in the past few years. In Parbhani, 
Marathwada, the State camp of the All-India Kisan Sabha called for the Bill's 
repeal. It also declared May 5 as a day of statewide protest to press this 
demand. 

No farmer we spoke to in four districts across Vidharbha knew of the Bill. Much 
less that it had been passed by the legislature. Even Agriculture Department 
officials seemed baffled by it. "We cannot pay the present charges," says Vijay 
Kophe of Borgaon village in Amravati district. "How will we pay these new ones? 
Our water, their taxes?" Kophe owns a little over two acres and has three 
children. 

  In an already water-starved region, a new law could put water beyond the 
reach of most farmers. [Picture by P Sainath]. 

"How many can afford drip or sprinkler irrigation," asks an amazed Gajanand 
Kumble, another farmer with an even smaller holding. "Where do they think the 
money will come from?" It will simply "give industry a giant captive market," 
scoffs Vijay Jawandia in Wardha. 

"What link is there between irrigation and children," asks Bhojraj Raut, 
sarpanch of Bathkuli village in Amravati. Labourer Gulabrao Nesram even finds 
it funny. "What about those with two children but no land? Will they be 
rewarded?" 

Agricultural crisis 

Like most villages in Vidharbha, this one too, is in the grip of an 
agricultural crisis and deep in debt. "The village failed to pay electricity 
bills of about Rs. 1 lakh," says the sarpanch. "So the power was cut off, the 
pumps are down and we cannot get even drinking water." 

"Why not fine the government," asks teacher R.M. Bhagywanth. "They have not 
paid cotton growers here dues of Rs.2,300 crores. How will people pay any bills 
without that? This law will push up suicides one hundred times." 

B.T. Deshmukh, an independent member of the legislative council from Amravati, 
defends the law. He was on the Joint Committee of both houses to which the 
prickly Bill was referred. After making several changes - and bringing in the 
two-child norm - the committee approved it. "It has built-in safeguards and 
protection for poorer regions," he insists. 

"New irrigation projects must first come in such places. The Governor's 
directives on these aspects must be observed." And, he points out, "we put in 
the `principle of equity' into the law." 


"Those who can pay must do so. There are farmers in some regions who can pay." 
But he concedes that the rates charged will be the same across the State. Which 
means many who cannot now afford irrigation, will likely never be able to. Mr. 
Deshmukh's district has less than four per cent irrigation. 
In Talegaon village, Ramesh Ingole used to pay Rs.400 as water charges for his 
two acres. "Then it went up to Rs.590. For the most recent crop we don't even 
know how much or how we will pay. If this new law is imposed, we are finished." 

The Bill says that charges "shall reflect the full recovery of the cost of the 
irrigation management, administration, operation and maintenance of the water 
resources project." Besides, the Government also seeks "partial recovery of 
capital investment." (The latter clause appeared in the version of the Bill 
passed by the Council.) 

What would this mean in practice? "If this is the framework, irrigation could 
cost as much as Rs.8,000 per acre, or more," says Prof. H.N. Desarda, a leading 
economist based in Aurangabad. Prof. Desarda, a former State planning board 
member, is also an expert on water issues. "There is no crop in Maharashtra," 
he points out, "which can sustain such levels of payment." 

Bill favours rich? 

"It means non-irrigated farmers will remain that way for life. Or be forced to 
quit farming in lakhs," says Anil Tiwari. He is President of the Pandarkauda 
Municipal Council in Yavatmal. A district with less than eight per cent 
irrigation. "This simply hands over agriculture to the rich." 

The poor are not ready to quit, though. "People won't allow this law to 
function," says Hidayat Khan, a gram panchayat member in Talegaon. In Borgaon, 
Vijay Kophe is defiant. "Let them send their tax collector. He will be one 
person. We will be 1500 to resist him." �� 


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