Hyderabad:The Kharif crop is ready for harvest and farmers want to make money by selling the abundant harvest. Therefore, they went for an early harvest and started transporting the yield to the mills. However, a lack of coordination among officials caused delays in procurement. With no other option, farmers staged protests demanding minimum returns for their harvest.
Hundreds of farmers are forced to wait with paddy laden tractors at rice mills owing to negligence and lack of foresightedness of the authorities concerned. On one hand, millers are not ready to procure the produce and on the other hand, authorities are lax in decision making. In the meantime, unseasonal rains are damaging their produce.
There are 200 rice mills, both small and large, in Miryalaguda of Nalgonda district in Telangana. Apart from the Nalgonda district, farmers from Khammam, Warangal and Guntur districts also bring paddy to these mills. Procurement of paddy usually begins after Deepavali. Due to high groundwater availability, farmers went for early seeding this year. The harvested paddy was transported to mills before the festival.
At present, only a few mills are purchasing paddy while more and more farmers are approaching the mills with their harvest. As a result, there is a huge delay in procurement. Due to unexpected rainfall, the grains are getting discoloured. Taking undue advantage of the situation, millers are paying a lower price than usual.
In the next 10 days, 4.50 lakh acres of paddy in the Nalgonda district will be harvested. All the produce will be transported to Miryalaguda. Before the situation turns worst, the farmers are demanding that the officials take necessary precautions. Officials and police, on the other hand, are appealing that only those farmers, who have been issued the tokens should bring their produce to the mills. Millers have also made it clear that they would procure the grains from farmers, who have taken tokens.
Procurement is currently underway at 46 mills in Miryalaguda. The problem is that a large number of farmers have begun crowding outside the mills after their produce was hit by the rains. It would take two days to load the produce to the mills, said Gouru Srinivas, president of Millers Association, Miryalaguda.
Farmers across the Nalgonda district are worried about the need to expedite the procurement process of the thin grain variety. They have blocked the roads, protesting that their crop is getting damaged in the rain due to severe delay. Hundreds of vehicles were stranded on the Narketpally-Addanki highway due to the protests. Nalgonda district police have blocked paddy tractors entering Nalgonda from Suryapet at Nereducharla mandal, Chillepally. There was a hindrance to vehicle flow on Miryalaguda-Kodad highway. The officials have begun issuing tokens to the tractors and allowed them towards the mills.