Friday 31 May 2019

The Opium Cultivators; Insecure Voiceless Victims


The Opium Cultivators; Insecure Voiceless Victims
                              By-:Piyush Kumar Roy

The condition of poor opium farmers dragged my attention on this issue “The Opium Cultivators; Insecure Voiceless Victims”, following which I decided to proceed with analysing the prevalent situation in present scenario. The research on the issue of improper channelization and substance abuse particularly in Rajasthan took me and my friends out of the confined classrooms and library wall, to the fields of opium and legal branches of police departments and judiciary. The information gathered from the stakeholders gave me an insight to proceed with the topic following which, I thought of jotting down my views in this article. The sources have not been mentioned as the condition of anonymity was placed.



The cultivation of Opium is practised in India since time immemorial, there have been changes in laws regarding cultivation, licensing system and other procedural transformation has taken place, but unfortunately what has remained the same is the condition of the opium cultivators.
The United Nations Single Convention on Narcotics Drugs, 1961 has listed India among 12 countries which is allowed to grow opium poppy for medicinal purpose. However India is the only country allowed to extract opium gum from the plant. The extraction of gum is a job which requires skill and experience of years. The gum is extracted by lancing the flower- bearing pod which consist 70% of morphine. The farmers make longitudinal incision in the pod, exuding latex forms a crust under the hot sun. The next morning, the semi solid latex is collected by scrapping with a towel. The process itself narrates the skill which needs to applied very precisely for cultivation and extraction of opium materials.
The initial stage of illegalities starts from this very stage. The other countries such as China, Australia, France and Turkey which grow opium legally use a method known as concentrate of poppy straw, where the entire plant is processed with its stalk to extract the drug. The task of extracting opium gum involves hard labour and skill and when appropriate monetary value is not sanctioned for the task, the poor farmers sell the extracts to private dealers and suppliers for sake of their livelihood.

Risky Cultivation
The cultivation of poppy is designated as risky and very caring task for the farmers, the care required here is as much as a pregnant women takes of the baby inside her womb. The farmers labour hard throughout the day and at night they are engaged in securing their cultivation, safeguarding it from thieves and wild animals as the burden of securing the product is solely on the farmer and in instances of any discrepancies, the helpless farmer stands to be the accused.

Financial Insecurity
The pity condition of the poor and insecure farmers has resulted in improper channelization of opium in the country. The words on moral ethics are simple to be delivered but tough to be implemented. The poor farmers, after putting so much of efforts and labour are paid a pittance which opens door for illegal marketing of opium in grey market. The farmers were paid Rs.1,800/kg, for their cultivation which is comparatively very low against the grey market pricing which ranges between Rs, 60,000/kg to 1.2 lakh/kg. This wide difference between the prices drives corruption and ultimately leads to leakage of opium and opium products in the market which is further used for preparation of drugs such as smack, heroin and cocaine with the use of morphine and is sold for addiction purposes in the market by the drugs mafias and suppliers.

Legal Hurdles
The opium licenses which is issued based on the past cultivation record as notified by the government of India in its official gazette. The farmer has to fulfil minimum per hectare quantity known as minimum qualifying yield criteria to get their license issued and upon failure their license stands to be cancelled. There are other strict criteria followed under licensing system such as 5.9% of morphine content, the cultivator must have the land in his own name and he must be the resident of the village and minimum amount of production is fixed, below which the cultivation is not accepted by the government but when it comes to security and facilities the condition is pathetic. If the production falls short either due to weather or pest attack the farmers stands to be helpless and in order to fulfil the minimum amount he is compelled to purchase the crop though illegal means at a very high price. The burden of informing the narcotics department for the destruction process is also solely upon the farmer and if they fail to do so he is liable to face the charges. The way farmers make out is that to sell the remaining crop to the private dealer and get some amount instead to allowing government to destroy the crops and leave poor farmers empty handed. The other trouble which cultivators face is in context to the area of cultivation. The farmers mostly cultivate in lesser area in comparison to the land allotted because even if the plot size for cultivation is an inch more they are booked under the stringent sections of NDPS.
The miserable life condition of pity farmers and imposition of stringent laws and legal regulations upon the farmers deprives them of moral ethics and they lose the trust and faith on the government and look for private purchaser who can pay them handsomely in return to their hard labour and skills.

The Cruel Period of 2015-2106
The cultivation of raw opium is not only used as extraction of poppy gums and other substances containing morphine but poppy seeds are also yielded out of the crop which is used as spice in kitchens of India. There is no legal restriction upon selling of poppy seeds in the market. This sell accounted profitability to the poor farmers but unfortunately in 2016 the price of poppy seeds dropped to Rs. 400/kg from Rs. 600/kg which laid loos of Rs.200/kg on farmers end.[1]
Until the orders of Rajasthan High Court by division bench of Chief Justice Anil Awbwani and Justice B L Sharma while hearing the petition filed by Chandigarh based NGO ArriveSAFE the sale of poppy husk was allowed in Rajasthan under the license obtained by the state government. The order of High Court banned the sale on poppy husk and the licenses were cancelled immediately.[2] The farmers were asked to burn their husk which resulted to heavy loss to the farmers. The ugly side of this loss is that not only a source of income was blocked but the farmers were even not compensated for such heavy loss.
The heavy loss of this source still haunts the poor farmers but they are still engaged in this activity in hope of better returns for the cultivation and other securities and benefits from the government.


Conclusion
When the issue of substance abuse and improper channelization of opium in Rajasthan is analysed and its dimensions are evaluated it appears that addiction is not the major problem rather, improper cultivation and hurdles faced by the cultivators of opium leads to such alarming issue in the state. The poor farmers out of their pity state sell their crop to private buyer and dealers for the sake of their livelihood.
It is high time that this issue gets redressed because such improper channelization by drugs mafias leads to addiction of drugs in the society.
There are two fold measure to control such improper channelization of opium, the first and the usual one is that government should increase the rate of purchase for the opium crop which will give financial securities to the farmers and repose trust on the government which shall reduce the leakage till a great extent. This method must be followed with other benefits to the farmers such as schemes providing security to cultivators in case of crop failure and other safeguarding measures should be facilitated by which the cultivators are able to protect their crop efficiently and effectively.
The other measure is that government should stop the open end cultivation of opium crop by the cultivators and give way to captive farming by the pharmaceuticals company under the strict laws and regulations. The license can be issued to the pharmaceuticals companies for the cultivation and liability of security can also be conferred upon them which is possible because such companies and industries are financially well off to manage the resources. The companies may engage its own cultivator for this purpose which will provide employment and financial security to cultivator or may heir independent cultivator on contractual basis for which proper legislations must be drafted so that cultivators get their adequate amount of share. The security of crops under both the conditions must be with pharmaceuticals companies so that helpless and innocent farmers do not face any inconvenience or trouble in course of cultivation.
The later method can be opted only upon the condition that the current cultivators are adequately compensated for their loss and their crop must be purchased at reasonable market price which suits the needs of the poor farmers.
The issue is not very complex to deal, only requirement here is the sincerity by the stakeholders and framing provisions benefiting the needs of the labourers and cultivators.



Article by Sayantan Bera ‘The Opium Trap’.

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