Exaggeration. Exaggeration. Exaggeration. I was subjected to this tiresome litany from various angry officials and a couple of politicians after one of their colleagues — who will remained unnamed — leaked to me the perilous state of India’s granaries and the rotting foodgrain within. On July 26, I reported how 50,000 metric tonnes of wheat and rice had rotted away, unfit even for animals; how 17.8 million tonnes, enough to feed...
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Central sops to stop paddy diversion in Kerala by M Sarita Varma
As rubber prices soared to Rs 180 per kg, even land, which is not traditionally best suited for rubber is getting converted in Kerala, thus shrinking the area under paddy cultivation. To stop diversion of paddy area towards rubber farms, the Kerala government has decided to implement a Rs 2,111-crore central package for paddy development in Kuttanad district, major producer of rice in the state. “Procurement price of paddy is now as...
More »“DMK has failed to stop smuggling of PDS food items”
The DMK government has failed to prevent smuggling of food items meant for public distribution, AIADMK general secretary Jayalalithaa alleged on Wednesday. “Though the government has issued a stringent warNINg against smugglers, not a day passes without smuggling of ration items. The warNINg remains on paper and no action has been taken against those who are behind the illegal act,” she said in a statement here. Recalling the collision involving a truck...
More »Rotting grain 6 times more than Govt claimed by Samar Halarnkar and Bhadra Sinha
After insisting in Parliament and elsewhere that the amount of rotting food grain revealed by the Hindustan Times was “exaggerated”, Food and Civil Supplies Minister Sharad Pawar’s own ministry has proven him wrong. Nearly 40 days ago, this paper first reported how 50,000 tonnes of grain had decayed in Punjab alone and 17.8 million tonnes, or as much as France consumes in a month, was at risk from rotting. Pawar and his...
More »Rural India's communication divide by V Sridhar and Shamsher Singh
The ubiquitousness of the mobile phone in urban areas and its spread in rural areas in India seem to have fed a notion — not substantiated by hard evidence — that there is a wide and deep market for such services in the countryside. Such a notion has remained largely unverified because of the scarcity of data on the extent of ownership of assets and access to services such as...
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