Farmers flood Mumbai, force Maharashtra govt to accept four major demands
Faced
with a public-relations crisis, the government of India’s richest
state accepted four major demands made by thousands of farmers, after
they flooded in to Mumbai on March 12, 2018.
A
seven-day, 180-km march of 35,000 mostly poor farmers in India’s
richest state finally attracted nationwide attention when they
reached the country’s financial capital to bring their problems to
the attention of Maharashtra chief minister Devendra Fadnavis.
They
marched for four distinct reasons: land rights to those who have
tilled forest land for several years; better minimum prices from the
government for agricultural produce and better security against the
vagaries of the monsoons; pensions for agricultural labour, still
considered a part of the informal sector; proper implementation of
farm-loan waivers that the government promised; and for relief from
the economic losses of 2016’s demonetisation decision.
As
the march made national headlines, the government announced by the
evening of March 12, 2018, that it would accept demands related to
expanding the eligibility of the farm-loan waiver announced in 2017,
quicker transfer of land titles under the Forest Rights Act, 2006,
and increasing pensions to agricultural labourers, from Rs 500 to Rs
1,000 per month.

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