Home
Archive
Newsletters
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise

India: Dozens Of More Farmers Commit Suicide Due To Drought


By The Huffington Post News Team, Huffington Post


Post Tools
email EMAIL

Share and save this post:

      

      

Share on Facebook       

AlterNet Social Networks:
follow us on twitter
find us on Facebook

HYDERABAD, India — Dozens of impoverished farmers struggling with debt and poor rainfall have killed themselves in southern India in recent weeks, leaving behind families plunged even further into poverty, activists and politicians said.

Nearly every day, newspapers report more farmer suicides in Andhra Pradesh, a state of 80 million people where 70 percent of the population depends on agriculture – and which has suffered badly this year from weak monsoon rains.

Officially, the total number of suicides stands at 25 in the past six weeks. But opposition parties and farmers' groups say the true total is more than 150.

"The government is trying to hide the facts," opposition leader N. Chandrababu Naidu said Wednesday in a speech before the state assembly. "I have a list of the names and addresses of 165 farmers who have ended their lives because of the distress caused by the drought."

Farmer suicides have, over the past decade, become a grim ritual in Andhra Pradesh and other parts of the Indian agricultural heartland, where small farmers are increasingly in debt. The sums can appear barely consequential to a Westerner, or even to India's increasingly large middle class: $300, $500, $1,200.

But for families often earning less than $2 a day, the loans, mostly made by small-town moneylenders, can be overwhelming. More than 17,500 farmers a year killed themselves between 2002 and 2006, according to experts who have analyzed...

Click here to read the entire article...

 
  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Advertisement
Advertisement