Nawagarh in Durg district of Chhattisgarh is a small place by all standards. As 
in all small places here too everyone knows everybody and it was not difficult 
to find a local journalist as soon as we reached Nawagarh. We were looking for 
help to investigate the story of a farmer�s suicide in Chhattisgarh. A simple 
enquiry at a local paan shop on the roadside got us the address and directions 
to the most famous journalist in town.

Here journalists wear many hats. Ashish Jain runs a grocery shop apart from 
being a correspondent for a daily from Chhattisgarh�s capital Raipur. A big 
picture of him with a state Congress leader in his drawing room tells us that 
he is also active in local politics apart from journalism and his shop.

While waiting for tea I asked him if there have been many incidents of farmers� 
suicide in Nawagarh lately?

�No, we have never heard of any farmer�s suicide here,� Ashish said very 
confidently. He was, in fact, quite surprised to hear my question. His brother, 
who is a correspondent for another daily from Raipur and was in the shop next 
door while we chatted in the drawing room, overheard our conversation and made 
a quick call to the police inspector of the town and confirmed that no farmers 
had committed suicide in the area.

I took out a list provided by the police headquarters in Raipur and started 
counting. It had names and addresses of 23 farmers who had committed suicide in 
the last 18 months under Nawagarh police station. So how far were the villages 
listed here? I wanted to know. Ashish had a close look at the list and said 
that all the villages in the list were within 4-5 km from Nawagarh.

But he still would not believe us and was shocked to hear that according to 
data of the National Crime Records Bureau, Chhattisgarh has highest rate of 
farmers� suicide per one lakh population in the country. �I have never read 
about it anywhere in the newspapers,� he said.

�The figure is not just for this year. Chhattisgarh remains at the top of the 
list every year since its inception. 1,593 farmers committed suicide in the 
state last year according to the data provided by state police to the National 
Crime Records Bureau,� I said. It means four farmers die every day by 
committing suicide and in the tally, Durg is just behind Raipur, which tops the 
list amongst the districts of Chhattisgarh.

Two hundred and six farmers committed suicide in Durg last year alone. Ashish 
was bewildered. After taking directions from him, we set off to meet the 
families of some of the farmers from the police list who committed suicide last 
year. There was one farmer from Mohtara village, who as per the list had 
decided to put an end to his life because of a heavy loan. We thought of going 
to his family first.

�Pardesi, who died?� Yes. �Go along the pond and knock at the last house to 
your left. That is Pardesi Sahu�s house,� people told us at the village square 
in Mohtara.

Raju looks younger than the twenty years he claims his age to be. But he is the 
eldest in the house now. He needs to take care of sister Rajmati and younger 
brother Rajesh after father�s demise. His mother died a natural death six-seven 
years ago and his two elder sisters were married before that.

Raju has no answer to why his father may have consumed poison. �May be he was 
unhappy with my mother�s death� he said. But that was six-seven years ago. 
�Maybe he was drinking too much,� he answered reluctantly.

Sawat Sahu, an old friend of Pardesi joined us by this time and objected to 
this remark from Raju. �Yes, Pardesi used to drink when he met his friends of 
that type but he was definitely not a drunkard.�

�How much loan did he have?� I asked. �It was around Rs 1 lakh,� Raju replied. 
Who was the loan from? �We have a Rs 10,000 loan from the bank and the rest was 
from relatives and friends.�

Did they come to your house to ask for the money? �Yes, they used to come to 
our house asking for the money. But I have now returned most of the loans,� 
Raju said. �You have returned the loans, how?� I asked.

�I sold 55 decimal of land after my father�s death to repay the loans to 
relatives. I have repaid Rs 60,000. But there is another 30,000 still to be 
paid to Padum Guruji in Jhal and one more relative in Semarsal.�

�I have not paid the bank yet.� But I would have thought that being your 
relatives, you can return the money to them later, they would wait, and you 
would return the money to the bank first, I said.

�No. I did not want the relationships to go sour. My father died in shame that 
he could not return their loan so that is the first thing I did after my 
father�s death,� Raju said.

The story was becoming clearer now. Sawat Sahu sitting nearby pitched in: 
�Though Pardesi had 2 acres (0.8 hectares, ha) he used to take another 4-5 
acres (about 2 ha) on lease every year. He thought he would repay the loans 
with income from the extra land but the crop failed.�

Pardesi�s elder sister also joined in by now. �Many years ago we used to go out 
to work to other states and had bought this land with the help of that earning. 
It would have been better had my brother continued to go out to do labour and 
not insisted on farming. This farming has killed him. Pardesi had sold 2 acres 
(0.8 ha) earlier as well, to repay loans in the past. By this time he had only 
2 acres (0.8 ha) left and could not bear the thought of having to sell them 
too,� she said.

It was quite obvious that suicide is such a negative thing socially that people 
do not want to think about the reason a family member may have committed 
suicide. Or even if they think about it, they try to avoid discussing it with 
outsiders and it is difficult to get the story out as a journalist, unless one 
is prepared to be very persistent.

We now moved to nearby Ranbod village, where Beturam Sahu committed suicide. He 
also had 2 acres (0.8 ha). His wife is sick and weak, and it is obvious that 
she has not been able to manage to put together enough money even for food. She 
lives with a small baby in their mud hut next to the village pond.

Though the crop is yet to be harvested, this year the elder son Lakhnu has 
already left for Agra to earn some money by labour work. They have a loan of Rs 
30,000 on them.

�The crop is so bad this year that we will not even be able to save any seeds. 
There were no rains at all,� said Santosh, Lakhnu�s friend. �That�s why Lakhnu 
left even before harvesting the crop. There is nothing left to harvest in his 
land this time. It is all gone. He is worried how will he repay these loans.�

Jeevan, a friend of Beturam, said �Beturam died due to loans. He had no fight 
with anyone. He was also not keeping well lately and burnt himself one day. 
Here every farmer is in debt. I have 15 acres (6 ha) but I too have around Rs 
27,000 loan from the bank.�

Santosh sitting next to him said, �There is a case pending on my land so I 
can�t get loan from the bank. I have taken a loan of Rs 13,000 from the 
moneylender. Lakhnu also borrowed from the moneylender because the land is 
still in his father�s name. So the bank did not give any loan to him this time.�

The districts with highest rate of farmers� suicide are the same which have the 
maximum usage of chemical fertilizer in Chhattisgarh

How is it that these obvious farmers� suicide stories are not visible to 
journalists like Ashish Jain, who live so close? It is surprising.

To go to the third village Nandal, we needed to come back to Nawagarh as Nandal 
is on the other side of Nawagarh.

Shatrughan Sahu of nearby Dharampura village was on his motorbike. We stopped 
by to ask him the direction for Nandal. I also asked him, �Have you heard of 
farmer suicides in the area?� Shatrughan was the first person in the entire 
region to accept, �Yes, farmers are committing suicide here but they are all 
the idiot ones,� he said.

Shatrughan has two shops in Nawagarh town. On further enquiry he said, �The 
water level has gone down below 250 feet here. It used to be at 40 feet few 
years ago. Most of the farmers here are indebted and only God can save the ones 
who do not have a bore well.�

Like everyone here, state chief minister Raman Singh also says, �Not a single 
farmer has committed suicide due to loan in the state ever.�

The police records for last few years for Durg district have 13 deaths listed 
as farmers� suicide due to debt. Not only that, 31 farmers are listed as having 
committed suicide due to economic distress.

Now we moved on to Nandal with directions from Shatrughan. Teerathram Sahu in 
Nandal used to work alone on his farm. Both his sons went to work as masons in 
Pune. He sold half an acre (0.2 ha) to repay a loan few years ago but since his 
sons started sending money from Pune he did not have to borrow any money.

After the father�s death the younger son Arjun has stayed back and does 
farming. �My father had no loan but he wasted all the money we sent from Pune 
in farming. He used to take 8-9 acres (about 3.2-3.6 ha) on lease and thought 
he would earn handsome amount from that, but the crop failed,� Arjun said. His 
father was sick as well.

This year Arjun has taken only 3.5 acre (1.4 ha) on lease. �There is no profit 
in farming. All our income from Pune has gone waste. We have a very small 
unpaid loan of Rs 2,500. But my father died of the guilt of wasting all our 
earning. We tried for a borewell few years ago but that failed,� Arjun said.

It was getting dark now. But on the way back we decided to stop by at Netram 
Yadav�s house in village Bhainsa. Netram was educated till class 4 and had 3 
acres (1.2 ha) and used to take more land for farming on lease every year.

His wife can�t think of any other reason why he committed suicide. �He was 
worried about the loan of Rs 15,000 he had taken from the moneylender. There is 
an interest of Rs 5 per month on every Rs 100 and he was worried how he would 
repay it. He was a good farmer. He had no fight in the family.�

His widow is left with three children to bring up. Two of them go to school and 
the youngest is a toddler.

My father wasted all the money that my brother and I sent after working as 
masons in Pune. All our income from Pune was wasted in farming
-ARJUN SAHU, NANDAL

Netram had some problem in his eyes and that was giving him trouble. His 
brother Santram now goes to work as labourer for farmers from Haryana who have 
bought large tracts of land and grow sugarcane on them. Their land is not 
irrigated and they can grow only 10-12 bags (of 75 kg) of paddy per acre.

Suicide is a complex issue and needs deeper investigation. A journalistic 
enquiry can only provide pointers to this problem�to draw attention of the 
people who are in a position to study the matter in detail and take appropriate 
action.

But will anyone heed the pointers? Not only Chief Minister Raman Singh but the 
opposition Congress also does not see any farmers� suicide in the state. Some 
members of the farmers� wing of the Congress party tried unsuccessfully to 
include the subject in the Congress manifesto for the last assembly election.

A high-profile Congress leader told me righteously, �We also visit the 
villages. We do not see any farmer committing suicide. So how can we include 
the issue in the manifesto?�

Maybe the reason no one can see is because no rich farmer is committing suicide.

Who cares for the poor and idiot farmers anyway!



http://www.downtoearth.org.in/full6.asp?foldername=20090415&filename=news&sec_id=50&sid=29
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