When crop failures have forced thousands
into starvation in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa and Andhra Pradesh,
farmers in central and north Bihars Ganga diara are making hay,
well almost.
Farmers in chief minister Mrs Rabri Devis Raghopur constituency
have chosen to cultivate ganja instead of the usual mustard and other
rabi crops. That Bihars granaries arent overflowing makes
the practice all the more illegal. Raghopur has the largest number of
acres under ganja cultivation (more than 6,000 acres, said a farmer).
Ganja has found favour with farmers after over 20,000 million paddy
and wheat bags started rotting in procurement centres of the FCI and
State Food Corporation over the last two years. The farmers then took
to cultivating ganja in defiance of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic
Substances Act.
Its a dangerous change in the crop pattern, said Mr
Ranjit Singh Rana, owner of Basdeva Farm in Dumraon, Buxar. But
the farmers have to cultivate something that is profitable.
Mr Rana, who leads a farmers organisation, demanded that the government
legalise ganja cultivation. It will add to the states
coffers as we are ready to pay Rs 1 lakh per year on every acre under
ganja cultivation.
Excise officials recently raided various farms in Bakhtiarpur diara
where ganja is cultivated and destroyed crops worth crores of rupees.
But they did not do the same in adjoining Raghopur.
We did not want to meet the fate of the former Excise commissioner,
Mr GS Kang, said a senior official. Mr Kang was transferred as
commissioner of fisheries the day he organised raids on ganja farms
in Raghopur.
Asked
about the farmers demand to legalise ganja production,
the Excise minister, Mr Shivanand Tiwary, told The Statesman: There
is no such plan under consideration. Ganja cultivation is illegal and
the government will bring all those involved in the cultivation to book.
Mr Rana, however, asked: If the government can issue a licence
for producing and selling
liquor, why cant it do the same for ganja?