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Farmers committed suicides due to impotency and love affairs claims Union Agriculture Minister

Everyone in the country feels that the farmers in India committed suicides due to debt-ridden condition and poverty but the Indian Union Minister Radha Mohan
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Everyone in the country feels that the farmers in India committed suicides due to debt-ridden condition and poverty but the Indian Union Minister Radha Mohan Singh feels that farmers committed suicide due to impotency and love affairs. What logic does the Union Agriculture Minister have to support his claims? Read the complete report here.

[su_expand more_text=”READ MORE” less_text=” ” height=”0″ hide_less=”yes” link_style=”button” link_align=”center”] According to the reports published by IANS news agency, Union Agriculture Minister Radha Mohan Singh claimed that Dowry, love affairs and impotency were among the reasons for the deaths of over 1,400 farmers in India this year. However, he does not rule out debt as one of the reasons behind the suicides of 5,650 farmers in 2014.

Union Agriculture Minister Radha Mohan Singh - Source The Hindu
Union Agriculture Minister Radha Mohan Singh – Source The Hindu

To put his point across Radha Mohan Singh gave the reference of National Crime Records Bureau. “According to the National Crime Records Bureau, causes of (farmer) suicides include family problems, illness, drugs, dowry, love affairs, and impotency,” he told the Rajya Sabha in a written reply to a question as to what caused the death of so many farmers in the country.

According to the sources, the remarks on suicide by over 1,400 farmers in the last one year, by the government’s own admission, are bound to provide fresh fodder to a belligerent opposition, which has been targeting the Narendra Modi government on the controversial land bill, dubbed as “anti-farmer and anti-poor”.

According to the national records, a total of 5,650 farmers committed suicide in 2014, with the maximum deaths reported from Maharashtra, Telangana, and Chhattisgarh, official data revealed. “According to “Accidental Deaths and Suicides in India 2014” report released by the bureau, of the 5,650 farmers who committed suicide, 5,178 were men and 472 were women,” claimed the sources.

“The highest incidents of 2,568 suicides of farmers were in Maharashtra (45.5 percent), followed by 898 suicides in Telangana (15.9 percent) and 826 in Madhya Pradesh (14.6 per cent),” the data revealed.

“Telangana reported the maximum cases of female farmers’ suicides at 31.1 per cent followed closely by Madhya Pradesh (29.2 per cent), and Maharashtra (14.1 percent),” it added.

Bankruptcy/indebtedness and family problems were major causes behind the suicides, accounting for 20.6 per cent and 20.1 per cent of the deaths respectively. Other causes included crop failure (16.8 percent) and illness (13.2 percent).

The report revealed that 65.75 per cent of the farmers who committed suicide were in the age group of 30 to 60. In all, 59 were below 18 years of age. Even though 15 people took their lives every hour in 2014, the overall suicide figures witnessed a drop from 1,34,799 in 2013 to 1,31,666 in 2014, the NCRB said.

Here again, Maharashtra reported the maximum suicides (16,307), followed closely by Tamil Nadu (16,122) and West Bengal (14,310). In addition, Bhopal reported a significant increase in the number of suicides — from 384 in 2013 to 1,064 in 2014, an increase of 177 percent, while suicides declined by 78.7 per cent in Kanpur — from 648 in 2013 to 138 in 2014.

Source: THE HINDU

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