The farmers바카라™ agitation, like any other socÂial movement, has its own text, conÂtext and sub-text. The text of agitation, quintessentially, is the protest against big corporate capital being proffered by the government, typically evident in the context of the three farm laws. Broadly, farmers see the announcement that these laws would be repeÂaled in the ensuing winter session of Parliament as a pyrrhic victory바카라”too little too late. After all, nearly 700 farmers died protesting. It is the sub-Âtext that mystifies the fine print of agrarian refÂoÂrm, and where the movement바카라™s discourse is embÂedded.
To put the text in perspective, let바카라™s recall the thrÂee central farm laws. 바카라˜The Farmers바카라™ Produce TraÂde and Commerce (Promotion and FaciliÂtaÂtion) Act, 2020바카라™, 바카라˜The Farmers바카라™ (Empowerment and ProÂtection) Agreement of Price Assurance, Farm Services Act, 2020바카라™, and 바카라˜The Essential CommÂoÂdÂiÂties (Amendment) Act, 2020바카라™, were aimed at sun-Âsetting the Minimum Support Price (MSP) regÂiÂme through a new arcÂhÂitecture of contract farming, bereft of any crop-Âprice guarantee or clear dispute resolutÂion mechanism. It also laid down a roadmap for hoarding and storage of some essential farm proÂduce by private traders, mainly big corporaÂtes, which they were legally unable to do before. The so-called agrarian reforms by the Centre, predicated on these three enabling laws, were not only an indictment of federal principles as enshrined in the Constitution, but a recipe prepared for both national and global neo-liberal ageÂnda. The laws marked the continuation of the NatÂional Agricultural Policy announced by the BJP-led NDA coalition on July 28, 2000, to induÂstÂrialise and privatise the agrarian sector for expÂort and trade-led growth. The debilitating impÂlications of the policy shiÂft, as perceived by the farmers, were, among others, the removal of price support and subsidies, comÂplete dependence on the vagaries of market forces, absence of government contÂrol and accÂountability, and easier import/export of agricÂuÂltural commodities within the larger fraÂmework of global trading systems in agriculture. In a nutÂsÂhell, farmers saw these laws and policies as an insÂtrument of land grab by corporates.
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The three farm laws provided farmers fodder to textualise their protest. The current movemeÂnt, perhaps the longest and biggest peasant struggle in the history of India, is led by Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM), which is a front of nearly 500 peasants and farmers organisations of the couÂntry, and represents a kind of 바카라˜consociational movement바카라™ of farmers. ConÂÂsociational, becaÂuÂse it is seen as the association of associations. The movement emerged as largely peaceful, secular, united and democratic, despite being labelled, quite often, as Khalistani, Pakistani, Chinese, Communist, Maoist and what not. It battled all crude vagaries of weather and state repression. The government had dug up and blocked the highway entries, to restrict farmers from marching on to Delhi바카라™s Ram Lila ground, and used water cannons and lathis on more than one occasion to dismantle the protÂeÂsts. The movements바카라™ communal harmÂoÂny credentials were evident during all-Âreligion prayers at protest sites. At a MuzaffarÂnÂagar rally, the largest of the movement, protesters reasserted their primÂary identity as farmers and exemplified themselves as a uniÂted demÂocratic force, not to be divided on the basis of caste or religÂion. The participation of women in large numÂbers further strengtheÂnÂed the movÂemÂent, which subsuÂmÂed all ascriptive identities such as caste, gender and religion into a big consociational-Âclass whole, essentiaÂlly because it aimed to resist the penÂeÂtration of big corporate capital into the precarities and vulnerabilities of class-Âcaste divisions of agrarian social structure.
The sub-text of the movement, therefore, is what it uncovers바카라”the possibilities of contÂesÂting and negotiating under this regime. UnlÂike other social movements, which also aim at civÂil-Âsociety reforms바카라”for instance the feminist movement바카라”this consociational-class movÂement of farmers targeted both national and global capital pushed by an authoritarian government thrÂoÂuÂgh its agrarian policies. The laws were first proÂÂÂÂmulÂgÂated as ordinances, and then, without much debÂÂaÂte, taking advantage of the pandeÂmÂic바카라”ÂpasÂsed hurriedly in an authoritarian manner.
Any discussion on the subtext of agrarian mobilisation must take into account the growing capitalist tendencies and class-differentiation in the agrarian economy, that unfÂolds fresh concerns and reshapes new agrarian structures and production relations. In the mid-60s, for instance, the issue of land redistribution, particularly the 바카라˜land to the tiller바카라™ demand, dissipated due to fresh anxieties caused by the Green Revolution. Rich farmers, benefitting from the technology-based change, mobilised the smaller peasanÂtÂry using a region-caste-class enmeshing strÂaÂÂtÂeÂgy. We may recall that the benefits of the Green Revolution were quite unevenly distributed, and how it exacerbated regional, caste and class inequalities. FarÂmers바카라™ movements in the 70s and 80s were basÂically led by surplus-ÂproÂduÂcing rich peasants and bullock capitalists바카라”the prosperous 바카라˜middle peasants바카라™바카라”who mobiÂliÂsed the peasantry through class-collaboration in the form of what was then dubbed as 바카라˜New Farmers바카라™ Movements바카라™ and focuÂsed specifically on remuneÂrative prices. Charan Singh, the towering leader of Bhartiya Kranti Dal (BKD), mobilised north IndÂia바카라™s smaÂller peasantry classes and lower castes by using the 바카라˜bhaichara바카라™ of khaps, despite much of BKD being controlled by rich peasants and big landÂlords (in class terÂms) and Jats and OBCs (in caste terms). EnmesÂhing via class, caste and religion is the underlying theme of farmers바카라™ movemÂents, then and now.
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The history of farmers바카라™ movements tells us that though efforts were made by the State to divide these along landlord and landless farmers, rich and poor peasants, and various ascriptive identities such as caste and religion바카라”farmers have, more often than not, identified their goals and collectively rallied to achieve these. In recent timÂes, we have seen that farmers, and in some case even tribals, unitedly resisting large-scale land acquisition by state governments at the behÂest of national and international capital. FarmÂers believe increasing state regulations and interventions in the agrarian economy through privatisation will negatively impact their livelihood, and there is, therefore, a clash between local farmers바카라™ interests and that of domestic/global capital.
The ongoing farmers바카라™ movement reaffirms that peasants are makers of their own rebellion and constitutive of their own political consciousness. We witnessed how the movement often got discrÂedited, with peasants labelled as bhola bhala, docÂÂile, passive, and misled by shrewd, anti-natiÂoÂnal forces from outside the movement. Yet, it proved what political scientist Partha Chatterjee shows us바카라”that peasants have 바카라˜specific subjectivity바카라™ of their own political consciousness related to the political processes in political society. The movement, with its partial victory, establishes the fact that for corporate capital to penetrate the hinterland economy, it needs to present a recÂipe that would outstrip the autonomy of post-Âcolonial peasants바카라™ political consciousness. At the moment, it seems to be a difficult task. Therein lay the strength of farmers바카라™ movement.
(This appeared in the print edition as "The Hinterland Fortress")
(Views expressed are personal)
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Tanvir Aeijaz teaches public policy and politics at DU