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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, May 13, 2001 |
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Opinion
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Weavers - woes loom still
The suicides may have stopped for the moment but the plight of
Andhra Pradesh's powerloom weavers has not improved, says K. M.
Dayashankar.
FOR THE powerloom weavers of Andhra Pradesh, not much has changed
despite all the recent attention to their plight after more than
40 suicides were reported this year. The authorities have stopped
visiting them once the suicide rate dropped. Now, the weavers say
most of them are again on the verge of committing suicide.
Mr. Buli Rajesham, a powerloom weaver in Sircilla, says he is not
getting any employment while his debts have increased to Rs.
70,000. He tried his luck in Bhiwandi but in vain. He has since
returned home and the family now subsists on the money his wife
makes rolling beedies. Several visits to the revenue authorities
for rehabilitation have been of no avail.
Mrs. Orugula Siddamma says two years ago her family had eight
powerlooms and sold their cloth in the neighbouring villages. But
after the cost of production rose with the hike in power tariff
and sales tax, they sold their looms which cost Rs. 40,000 each
for as little as Rs. 15,000 a piece to clear their debts. Her
husband now labours at a construction site and their son, who
studied up to the ninth standard, works as help at a small shop.
She and her three daughters roll beedies to add to the family
income.
Another woman, Mrs. Revathi, too has a similar story to tell. Her
family took loans to buy six powerlooms but again the rise in
production costs and lack of a market forced them to sell the
looms as scrap. Her husband too migrated to Bhiwandi but he could
hardly send home Rs. 1,500 every three months.
They now face abject poverty and do not even get subsidised rice.
All because, being powerloom owners, they were given pink and not
white ration cards. Her three young daughters wanted to undergo
free Government training in garment making on some Japanese
machines but were not allowed to as they possessed a pink ration
card. ``If white ration card is the only solution for problems
then we will also be forced to commit suicide due to
starvation'', she says.
Sircilla once provided ample work for the weavers, so much so it
was called the `Sholapur of Andhra Pradesh'. Even after the
introduction of powerlooms, the weavers did not face any
problems. But once jet and auto looms made their advent in other
States, the weavers' woes began. And the power tariff hike and
the increase in sales tax on yarn were the last straw.
About 12,000 powerlooms, providing employment to 15,000 weavers
in Sircilla, have started closing down due to escalation in the
production cost and lack of market for the fabric. Most of the
weavers have migrated to other places in search of work, while
their wives have been forced to take to rolling beedis. Their
children have stopped going to school and are working in hotels
and shops.
But relief and rehabilitation, even for the families of weavers
who have committed suicide, is going at snail's pace. Though the
number of suicides rose from March this year, the Government
responded only after four members of a family died after
consuming pesticides on April 2.
The administration announced an ex-gratia of Rs. 10,000 under the
national family benefit scheme to the kin of weavers who
committed suicide and old age and widow pensions for the weavers'
families. It distributed 10 kg of rice to some poor weavers and
handed out white ration cards to some.
The administration said it would help the weavers diversify and
train them in alternative vocations. But, nothing has happened so
far. Some Japanese machines for training women in garment and
dress making, have been imported; that is all. But over 2,000
children of weavers have come forward to undergo training in
computer data entry, the electrician's trade, welding and
fabrication, TV and radio repair, and even take a beautician's
course, and learn baking and cooking.
Though, the Andhra Pradesh Government has constituted a Cabinet
sub-committee to formulate short-term and long-term plans to ease
the problems of weavers, only the Minister for Handlooms and
Textiles, Mr. Padala Bhoomanna, visited Sircilla. He did not
announce any long-term solution but said the Government is
considering reducing the power tariff for powerloom weavers and
exempting them from sales tax.
The State Handlooms and Textiles Department invited experts from
the Textile Commissioner's office, Chennai, and the South India
Textile Research Association (SITRA), Coimbatore, to Sircilla to
study the problems. An expert from the Textile Commissioner's
office had suggested modernisation of powerlooms under the
Technology Upgradation Fund Scheme (TUFS) and promised technical
assistance. A representative from SITRA said the Sircilla looms
produced cloth of 40 inches width and suggested they be converted
to produce cloth of at least 63 inches width.
The State Handlooms and Textiles Director, Mrs. Y. Srilakshmi,
said the Sircilla powerlooms would be modernised by providing
financial assistance. She also promised to set up a service
centre. But the weavers point to a long list of unfulfilled
promises. But neither the State nor the Centre promised any
revival plan for the Sri Raja Rajeshwara Cooperative Spinning
Mill in Sircilla - to provide employment to about 2,000 weavers.
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