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  • Sugar Daddies

    Sugarcane has fuelled the corruption of political power in some states of India – the world’s largest sugar producer. But, as Dionne Bunsha reveals, it’s the small farmers who pay the price.
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    • The Hutatma Model

      Corruption, mismanagement, political fiefdoms – these are the words usually associated with sugar co-operatives in Maharashtra. Here’s one that’s different.

      Dionne Bunsha
      In Walva, Maharashtra.
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      • Machines that Mow down Migrants

        The arrival of imported cane-harvesting machines in sugarcane fields may push migrant cane cutters deeper in bondage.

        DIONNE BUNSHA

        “This town rips the bones from your back
        Its a death trap, its a suicide rap
        We gotta get out while we’re young
        ‘Cause tramps like us, baby, we were born to run.”

        — Bruce Springsteen, Born to Run.

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        • Drowning Cotton’s Lifebuoy

          The Maharashtra government has refused to pay the full cotton procurement price immediately. This has left farmers at the mercy of trader-moneylenders. In a region where farmers suicides are frequent, the state is withdrawing support, pushing farmers closer to the edge.

          DIONNE BUNSHA
          in Vidarbha, Maharashtra
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          • A can of boll worms

            Many farmers in Gujarat didn’t know they were sold pirated Bt cotton seeds. Now, the government threatens to burn their crop.

            DIONNE BUNSHA
            In Gandhinagar district, Gujarat.
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            • Trade: A Free for all?

              While farmers in developed countries, constituting less than three per cent of the population, enjoy huge subsidies, India actually taxes its farmers. With substantive cuts in subsidies for power and fertilizer, and a fall in the selling price of agricultural produce due to dumping by developed countries, farmers face a crisis that needs to be addressed immediately.

              DIONNE BUNSHA
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              • Where’s the techno fix for farmers?

                Bitter Harvest 4

                DIONNE BUNSHA

                YAVATMAL:
                Litres of pesticide did not save his crop, but a few gulps of the lethal chemical ended his life.

                Vithal Krishnarao Kamble (26) committed suicide in May, unable to pay back the loans he had taken from the local moneylenders. He did not live to see his son, born a few weeks later.
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                • Drowning in Debt

                  Bitter Harvest 3

                  DIONNE BUNSHA
                  in Amravati

                  Sheikh Bhura Sheikh Ramzan has set up his home under a tree this monsoon. He sold his house to pay his debts. “When it rains heavily, we sleep in the village school,” says Sheikh, a resident of Dhanora Fasi village in Amravati.

                  Even after selling the roof over his head and a third of his three-acre plot, Sheikh still has an outstanding debt of Rs 10,000 with the local moneylender.
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