The government Thursday announced Rs 1.5 billion as relief to onion farmers.
A
day after the Maharashtra government announced Rs 1.5 billion relief
to onion farmers, BJP's ruling ally Shiv
Sena Friday took a dig at the Devendra Fadnavis-led dispensation
saying it has "woken up from slumber too late".
The
party said although the decision to provide relief to onion farmers
was good, the government needed to ensure that its implementation was
done in a speedy manner.
It
also alleged that the onion
farmers were yet to get the financial aid that was promised to
them under a similar scheme announced by the government in 2016.
The
government Thursday announced Rs 1.5 billion as relief to onion
farmers. The decision by the state cabinet came amid reports about
farmers selling freshly harvested onions at as low as Rs 1.50 a kg in
Maharashtra, the top producer of the bulb in the country.
The
financial relief consists of an ex-gratia payment at the rate of Rs
200 per quintal (with an upper limit of 200 quintal per onion farmer)
for the kitchen staple sold between November 1 and December 15, 2018.
"Despite
spending Rs 1,000 per quintal as input costs to grow onions, the
farmers had to sell the kitchen staple at Rs 500 per quintal in the
market. The prices further came down to Rs 100-105 per quintal, which
is Rs 1-1.50 per kg," the Sena said in an editorial in its
mouthpiece 'Saamana'.
In
September, the farmers had urged the government to take immediate
steps to control the decline in onion prices. But their demands went
unheeded, it alleged.
"Prices
of onions had similarly dipped in 2016 and the government had then
announced a relief of Rs 100 per quintal. However, there are
allegations that the onion growers have not received the money so
far. If that is true, the question that arises now is when will the
farmers receive the aid of Rs 200," it said.
"The
government has woken up from slumber very late. Although the decision
to provide relief to onion farmers is good, it sould ensure that
money is disbursed on time," the Uddhav Thackeray-led party
said.
Last
month, a farmer from Nashik, Sanjay Sathe, had sent Rs 1,064, which
he earned after selling 750 kg of his onion crop in a wholesale
market, to the Prime Minister's Office (PMO) as a protest.
The
farmer had said his intention was to prompt the government to take
some steps to ease the financial stress that farmers were suffering
because of the low prices.
The
PMO had later returned the farmer's money order.
Another
farmer from Maharashtra's Ahmednagar district, Shreyas Abhale, had
sent a money order of Rs 6 to Chief Minister Devendra
Fadnavis as a mark of protest against the crashing prices of
onion and the paltry returns.
Abhale
had said that after selling 2,657 kg onions at the rate of Rs 1 per
kg at the Sangamner wholesale market in the district and adjusting
market expenses, he was left with only Rs 6.
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