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Where BPL mobile means poor migrant
Determining who is below or above the poverty line has done
little to help the villagers of Gandharla, says noted journalist
P. SAINATH. Fuelled by distress, the scene in this habitation, as
is the case in the Orissa and Chattisgarh regions, is one of
chaos - a collapse of rural credit, plummeting investment in
agriculture, growing unemployment and desperate migration.
BOLANGIR, NUAPADA (ORISSA) and SARAIPALLI (CHATTISGARH):
CHELGOUD KARUAN could well be the poorest man in Gandharla
village. But he went for ages without the Below Poverty Line
(BPL) card that allows him to buy rice at a cheaper rate. He
mortgaged the card in desperation to Surendra Satpathy, part-time
poojari and small time operator, for just Rs. 500. For two years,
Satpathy drew the full quota of rice on that card. The loan was
to be adjusted by deducting Rs. 20 from it for each month that
the card remained with Satpathy.
Chelgoud, a dalit, says: "I had no choice. My wife was about to
have a baby and I needed some money for that." Chelgoud is
physically too frail for any kind of labour. Satpathy knew that
he could keep the card for a long time; possibly forever.
Thabira Karuan, Chelgoud's neighbour, mortgaged his BPL card to
another moneylender for just Rs. 100. In the same basti, Naikeshi
Lohar has never had a card at all. It did not matter that she is
as badly off as Thabira. Those doing the survey of BPL households
recommended her inclusion. But she did not make it. The
Government has rigid quotas on how many people may be declared
BPL in a given place. The BPL population is determined not by
poverty but by government fiat. So even if you are very eligible,
you may not make it. It is impossible for anyone to tell the
difference between BPL and Above Poverty Line (APL) families in
this basti.
The result in this period of high distress is chaotic. Several
among the poorest are selling or mortgaging their BPL cards.
Surendra Satpathy, who belongs to the sole brahmin family in the
village, has held at least five or six cards from this basti.
From these, he has drawn around 90 or 100 kg of rice a month at
BPL rates. He is able to sell this rice at a profit - just below
the APL rates. There are many hungry people who do not hold BPL
cards but who are not far from destitution.
He admits to taking only a couple of cards, but agrees he has
drawn huge quantities of rice (which would require at least five
cards) at BPL rates. "I need 90 kg of rice at home each month,"
he says. Which is odd. Apart from himself, there is only his
frail wife and two small daughters to feed.
Satpathy himself is far from rich. He is just relatively better
off than the dalits whose cards he holds. But he is slightly more
educated and cannier than his dalit neighbours. He points out
that he has returned the cards, which is true. He panicked when
award-winning young journalist Jagadish Suna broke the story on
the distress mortgaging of BPL cards amongst the poor of
Bolangir. Suna's reports literally brought back Chelgoud's card
to its real owner.
That is a scene from a single village. One that is repeated
across many here in Bolangir and in Nuapada district next door.
Several people have mortgaged or sold their BPL cards, driven by
acute distress. In Kharlakot village in Boden block of Nuapada,
we found five such cases in less than half an hour. In a couple
of cases, the younger family members had sold the card and
migrated, abandoning their parents. Purnachandra Chinda had sold
the card for Rs. 50 and left months ago. His ageing mother has
not heard from him since.
In the same village is Ranjit Jagat whose wife died of hunger
five months ago. "I cannot afford to even perform her tenth day
ritual," he says. He has lost his BPL card, too. "I mortgaged it
for Rs. 20 to get her an injection," he says. Jagat's
daughter-in-law mortgaged her wedding saree for Rs. 80. That
enabled her husband to go to Raipur to look for work. She has
gone too and the old man is now alone.
There is no work available here for the few younger ones who have
stayed. Nor are they finding any nearby.
The agricultural crisis is biting deep in the Kalahandi-Bolangir
region.
That crisis also shows up in the new twists to migrations out of
here. This is a high migration region even in "normal" years.
This year, many newcomers joined the thousands going to the brick
kilns of Vizianagaram and Hyderabad in Andhra Pradesh. That is
apart from the tens of thousands going to other destinations.
Quite a few of these were first-time migrants from groups
normally outside this cycle.
"The census in 2001 was meaningless for this region," says ex-MLA
Kapil Narain Tiwari in Khariar, Nuapada. "The crisis in
agriculture has greatly deepened poverty and spurred new
migrations. So a huge chunk of the population was out when the
enumeration took place. That is going to reduce the census
numbers to a farce."
Many are also back much sooner than anticipated - but after the
census. The numbers going out to the usual destinations were too
large. The flood of hungry workers brought about a steep fall in
labour wages in Vizianagaram and Hyderabad. The slow down of
construction in many other cities made things worse. The migrants
are returning with not much to do here either.
In both Nuapada and neighbouring Chattisgarh, there are efforts
on to generate employment through food for work programmes. Some
officers have done the best they could in this situation. For
instance, Nuapada Collector Bishnupad Sethi is respected in his
district. But the problem is so huge that the expenditures are
marginal to it. Besides, there is the usual slew of contractor-
led rip-offs eating into the efforts. At several worksites,
people were being paid far less than the stated minimum of Rs.
40. And besides, as Tiwari points out, "Many of the Kalahandi
region's problems begin in Bhubaneswar and beyond."
In the Sunabeda plateau of Nuapada, many cannot buy their
rations. The Orissa Forest Corporation which is the sole
collection authority for the (Tendu) Kendu leaf, has not paid
them their dues for months. Meanwhile, the forest department has
banned kendu leaf collection in much of the area. The place's
status as sanctuary is in dispute. Yet, even the collector's
pleas on behalf of the adivasis who live here have been ignored.
In Chattisgarh, no visitor can escape the irony. The drive in
from the airport to Raipur takes you past gigantic stocks of
foodgrain in open yards of the Food Corporation of India (FCI).
Quite a bit of this is exposed to the elements in just sacks. The
black polythene meant to protect them cannot cover the huge
stockpiles here. And there have been thunderstorms damaging the
exposed grain. A visit to villages not far away shows rising
hunger.
In Saraipalli in Chattisgarh, Sub-Divisional Magistrate Amrit
Xalxo is overseeing the repair of tanks. He is also trying to
construct troughs in each village for livestock.
Water for cattle is going to be a big problem right through this
summer. Though confident things are coming under control, the SDM
says: "Migrations must have doubled this year. Many of the
migrants are now coming back."
Distress sales of produce are on in a big way, too. Here and in
western Orissa. "At the time of harvest," says Jamodei Jagat in
Boden, "we sold paddy at Rs. 6 to Rs. 7 per maan (roughly 2.5
kg). Now we buy the rice at Rs. 12 or Rs. 13 per maan."
At the Sindhekela market in Bolangir, tarbooj is being sold at
rates as low as 50 paise per melon. Alongside, are women also
willing to sell rice at far less than what it coscost them to
produce it. The mali community that grows vegetables has taken a
beating with power "reforms". Earlier, they paid Rs. 60 to Rs. 70
per acre for electricity for irrigation. Now they have to fork
out Rs. 860. There is enough water nearby for the malis of
Birunpadar in Nuapada to pump up. But vegetable prices have
crashed and power rates have shot up.
Most of the factors on display in Rajasthan or Andhra Pradesh are
also in place here. The collapse of rural credit. Devastating
rate hikes in power. Crashing investment in agriculture.
Rocketing input costs. The misery caused by APL-BPL hair
splitting. Falling employment and desperate migrations.
The Kalahandi region alone has two perennial rivers. It has four
other significant rivers. And several other, smaller ones. It has
an abundance of resources. Also, highly skilled farmers. Its
labourers are valued across the country for their capacity for
back breaking work. Yet, it is once more in crisis. And once
more, "drought" is what the media are focussed on. Sure, the
drought is an aggravating factor. But it is not where the problem
began.
The whole region is getting the stick from a drought of policy
and a policy-driven drought.
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