Jump to content

Cbn Calls Farmers And Dwacra Women "useless Fellows"


Recommended Posts

Posted

Chandra Babu scolds farmers and women at Govada

 

8_8_201409_33_48_final.jpg

 

Chief Minister Chandra Babu Naidu was unable to control his anger. When agitating farmers asked him about implementation of agriculture loan waiver assurance during his interaction with farmers and women, Chandra Babu’s anger touched new heights while commenting them as ‘useless’ fellows.

 

During the road show at Govada, DWACRA women and farmers asked Chandra Babu for announcing their loan waiver scheme implementation repeatedly, he vent out his anger by saying ‘shut up’ while pointing women.

 

Almost at every village point in the journey from Anakapalli to Chodavaram, farmers and women questioned Chandra Babu in this regard. 

- See more at: http://www.visakanews.com/inVisakhapatnamNews.aspx?ID=40544#sthash.600TgtGt.dpuf

 

 

:3D_Smiles_38:  :3D_Smiles_38:  :3D_Smiles_38: 

  • Replies 34
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • CKRAVI

    8

  • puli_keka

    7

  • Piscop

    4

  • srikanthraparla

    3

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted

Pallu Pallu korukuntunnaadu


4s086h.gif?1403646236

 

Veedu marada bro... :3D_Smiles_38:

Posted

Blashindhi CBN kiii

Blashindhi CBN kiii

Blashindhi CBN kiii

Blashindhi CBN kiii

Posted

Blashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiii

Posted

y should he change ... people should change ... CBN is correct man  :3D_Smiles_38: :3D_Smiles_38:

Veedu marada bro... :3D_Smiles_38:

 

Posted

:3D_Smiles:  :3D_Smiles:  :3D_Smiles:

Blashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiii

 

Posted

Blashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiiiBlashindhi CBN kiii

 

Enduku antha kopam.. :3D_Smiles:

Posted

Veedu marada bro... :3D_Smiles_38:


Kukka Thoka vankara ani oorike analedu



4s086h.gif?1403646236
Posted

Mr N Chandrababu Naidu has been swept away by the tidal wave of the angry farmers. The small and marginal farmers, in tandem with the landless labourers, who constitute nearly 80-90 per cent of Andhra Pradesh 80 million people, have given their verdict: the industry-sponsored economic reforms are anti-poor.

Chandrababu-Naidu-Sharma12may04.GIF

Mr N Chandrababu Naidu

The electoral debacle in Andhra Pradesh is in reality a slap on the face of World Bank and the British DFID. Both these organisations have pumped in huge finances to push in an industry-driven agriculture that has not only exacerbated the crisis leading to an environmental catastrophe but has also destroyed millions of rural livelihoods. While the Chief Minister, who took pride in being called as Chief Executive Officer, was blindly selling prime land for a song in the heart of the capital city, Hyderabad, to the information and biotechnology industry, he remained oblivious to the plight of the majority population in the countryside.

The World Bank had backed up Naidu’s brand of economic reforms. In fact, the World Bank had bypassed the democratic norms of governance that suggest that every credit that it provides has to be routed through the national governments. Much of the Bank’s lending to Andhra Pradesh did not involve the Indian government. The BJP-led Coalition at the Centre turned a blind eye to the financial faux pas simply because Mr Naidu’s TDP was a major Coalition ally. The British DFID on the other hand pumped in millions of pounds to support Mr Naidu’s illogical Vision 2020 programme. Despite criticism, DFID merrily went on increasing investment in the name of rural development raising serious questions about the validity, necessity and the reasons behind the enhanced funding.

In reality, it was all aimed at making it smoother for the industry to move in. The Vision 2020 document talked of reducing the number of farmers in the state to 40 per cent of the population, and did not have any significant programme to adequately rehabilitate the remaining 30 per cent of the farming population. The objective was to promote the commercial interests of the agribusiness companies (read foreign financial institutes and international bankers) and the IT hardware units. All benefit would have accrued to these companies in the name of farmers. In fact, these two sectors, along with biotechnology, were being heavily subsidised in the name of efficiency and infrastructure whereas the poor farmers were being divested of the their only source of income – their meagre land holdings.

Andhra Pradesh in reality was fast turning into a BIMARU state (an euphemism for backward states). Thousands of farmers were migrating every season looking for menial jobs in the urban centres. Mofussil newspapers in the heartland of the cyberstate – that’s how Mr Naidu wanted the state to be called – were full of advertisements inviting people to mortgage their gold and silver belongings. Livestock deaths and the plight of dalits and other landless and marginalised no longer adorned the headlines. Farmers were asked not to produce more rice (the staple food) as the State had no place to stock it. Farmers suicides had become so common that Mr Naidu had actually sent team of psychiatrists to convince them against taking their own lives.

Believe it or not, daily wage workers in Andhra Pradesh can still be hired at a price that their counterparts in Bihar would scoff at. And yet, the ignorant media despised the maverick political leader Laloo Prashad Yadav for taking his state – Bihar – to economic backwardness whereas Mr Naidu was showered by all kinds of accolades. Such was the extent and level of poverty that Andhra Pradesh also topped the country in the percentage of women entering prostitution and trafficking. Mr Naidu on the other hand ignored the writing on the wall and went about holding web conferences with his bureaucracy much to the chagrin of the national media, which painted him as the poster boy for economic reforms and the techno-savvy CEO.

No wonder, the national newspapers as well as the TV channels, are now embarrassed at the outcome of the Andhra Pradesh election results. And yet, no lessons are being learnt. Newspapers have already quoted the secretary general of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI), Mr Amit Mitra as saying "economic initiatives in the IT and services sector should be extended to the rural areas and to such industries as food processing and rural industry". In the days to come, more and more industrialists would chant the economic mantra to push forth their own commercial interests. The industry refuses to accept that it was because of its own over-indulgence that Mr Naidu paid a heavy price. For the industry it doesn’t matter who is in power. What matters is how its commercial interests have to be furthered.

The tragedy is that while the farmers have delivered their verdict, the politicians are not willing to accept it. This is where the political equations have gone wrong, this is where the Indian democracy has reached superficial heights. The tragedy is that the line between the ruling party and the opposition has blurred. Both follow the same economic prescriptions that have no connection with the ground realities. The Congress too is bent upon pushing the economic reforms, and has the same direction for the agriculture sector that Mr Naidu falsely banked upon. The thrust on IT and biotechnology, as well as on agribusiness industry, will therefore remain intact.

For the Andhra Pradesh farmers, while the electoral battle has been successful the war against hunger, deprivation and increasing poverty is still to be won. They will have to stand up to the economic policies of the new government, which for reasons of political compulsions, may not be significantly different from Mr Naidu’s. It is in this connection that the farmers would require the help of civil society that can highlight the issues, create public opinion, and then force the policy makers to behave. It is surely a long fight. It is surely a struggle for the rights of the poor and downtrodden that has to be faught at various levels.

The first hurdle has already been crossed. Let us prepare for the second and most difficult stage of contest – to change the economic policies in favour of the poor. After all, they too are human beings, are made up of the same blood and flesh and have the right to survive in the inglorious and cruel world of market economy, which shift welfare benefits to the rich and make the poor more vulnerable.

×
×
  • Create New...