The following is sourced from http://thehoot.org/web/MPs--report-refutes-TOI-s-BT-Cotton-stories/6226-1-1-1-true.html.
At a time when the debate on the desirability or otherwise of the use of Bt cotton in India had intensified, on 31 October 2008, the Nagpur edition of the ToI published an article that painted a rather glowing picture of Bt cotton growing farmers in two villages in Maharashtra’s Yavatmal district in the state’s economically backward Vidharba region. TheToI article had the following to state about the residents of these two villages, Bhambraja and Antargaon: “There are no suicides here and people are prospering on agriculture. The switchover from the conventional cotton to Bollgard or Bt cotton here has led to a social and economic transformation in the villages in the past three-four years.”
On 10 May 2012, Sainath repeated some of these facts in an Op-Ed article in The Hinduprovocatively titled “Reaping gold with cotton, and newsprint”. The article quoted farmers of Bhambraja village telling members of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Agriculture who visited them: “There have been 14 suicides in our village…Most of them after Bt (cotton) came here.”
Sainath wrote: “The 2008 full-page panegyric in the ToI on Monsanto’s Bt cotton rose from the dead soon after the government failed to introduce the Biotech Regulatory Authority of India (BRAI) Bill in Parliament in August 2011. The failure to table the Bill — crucial to the future profits of the agri-biotech industry — sparked frenzied lobbying to have it brought in soon. The full-page (advertisement), titled ‘Reaping Gold through Bt Cotton’ on August 28 was followed by a flurry of advertisements from Mahyco-Monsanto Biotech (India) Ltd., in the ToI (and some other papers), starting the very next day. These appeared on August 29, 30, 31, September 1 and 3. The Bill finally wasn’t introduced either in the monsoon or winter session — though listed for business in both — with Parliament bogged down in other issues. Somebody did reap gold, though, with newsprint if not with Bt cotton.”
He added that the reports were the outcome of “a field visit organised by Monsanto for journalists from Nagpur.” The spokesman held that “as is the practice on such paid trips, the report mentioned” that it was arranged by the concerned company. He said he was “clueless” as to how the same story appeared in the newspaper’s Mumbai edition nearly three years later as part of the “Consumer Connect Initiative” section, a euphemism for a sponsored advertising feature. On the article getting reprinted, the ToI spokesman claimed: “It must have been picked up by Response” -- referring to the newspaper’s advertising division. He also stated that he had no idea about the full page advertisement that appeared in August 2011 being “followed by several advertisements”.
MPs' report refutes TOI's BT
Cotton stories
Buried in a parliamentary committee report is a
refutation by villagers of TOI’s controversial stories on BT cotton’s virtues,
published in 2008 and reprinted in the paper as paid news in 2011. PARANJOY GUHA THAKURTA
revisits the saga
Posted/Updated Friday, Aug 31
23:16:00, 2012
Allegations leveled by
Palagummi Sainath, Rural Affairs Editor of The Hindu newspaper
that its competing daily, the Times of India,published an article
at the behest of Mahyco-Monsanto Biotech without disclosing this fact to its
readers and subsequently gained financially from its publication, have been
endorsed by a committee of Parliamentarians in a recently-published report.
Whereas the report, prepared by a panel of MPs belonging to different political
parties, does not mention the ToI by name but merely describes
it as a “national daily”, the inferences are all too apparent.
The 37th report of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Agriculture tabled in both houses of Parliament on 9 August 2012 runs into 506 pages, including scientific and technical studies, ands international conventions and protocols that have been annexed. Among the 50 individuals and representatives of various organizations and government ministries who deposed before the committee, the last-named is P. Sainath.
In his introduction to the report, Committee Chairman Basudeb Acharia says the panel of MPs sought to take into account the “serious differences of opinion among various stakeholders and controversies surrounding the cultivation of transgenic crops”.
The 37th report of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Agriculture tabled in both houses of Parliament on 9 August 2012 runs into 506 pages, including scientific and technical studies, ands international conventions and protocols that have been annexed. Among the 50 individuals and representatives of various organizations and government ministries who deposed before the committee, the last-named is P. Sainath.
In his introduction to the report, Committee Chairman Basudeb Acharia says the panel of MPs sought to take into account the “serious differences of opinion among various stakeholders and controversies surrounding the cultivation of transgenic crops”.
Here is a verbatim account of what the report stated on
pages 346, 347 and 348:
“While interacting with the villagers, the committee got
first hand information about the plight of the farmers of Maregaon. The farmers
very candidly blamed the policies of the government which they felt was
responsible for their plight. In particular, their ire was targeted towards Bt
cotton. The committee (members) were informed that with the inception of Bt
cotton, input costs had gone high resulting in farmers falling into the debt
trap. Further, the falling price of cotton in the international market resulted
in farmers not getting remunerative price for their produce. They also stated
that in the absence of a buffer zone, those wanting to cultivate non-Bt cotton
were not able to do so. Bt cotton was pushing the farmers into the vicious
cycle of debt and being unable to repay the debt due to decreasing earning
farmers were under severe stress and developing a feeling of loss of their
self-respect which was ultimately pushing them to commit suicide. ..
“The committee (members) also interacted with a couple of
widows who in the aftermath of their husband’s suicide were hard pressed to
make both … ends meet. The villagers implored upon the committee to voice their
request to the concerned central authorities to ban farming of Bt cotton in the
country. They also voiced their unhappiness with the relief offered to them via
the Prime Minister’s Relief Package especially in terms of milch animals. They
were given exotic breeds like Jersey and Holstein who were unable to adjust to
the local environmental conditions and as a result died. They wanted indigenous
breeds instead.
“During the course of their interaction, farmers
from the village of Bhambraja requested the committee (members) to visit their
village as well. The committee acceded to their request and visited Bhambraja
village in Yavatmal district on 2 March 2012. This village has witnessed 14
cases of suicide by farmers post Bt cotton, i.e. from 2002. They also rubbished
the claims of their village being a model village for Bt cotton as reported on
28 August, 2011 in the edition of a national daily under the caption ‘Reaping
Gold through BT Cotton’ and other articles.”
At a time when the debate on the desirability or otherwise of the use of Bt cotton in India had intensified, on 31 October 2008, the Nagpur edition of the ToI published an article that painted a rather glowing picture of Bt cotton growing farmers in two villages in Maharashtra’s Yavatmal district in the state’s economically backward Vidharba region. TheToI article had the following to state about the residents of these two villages, Bhambraja and Antargaon: “There are no suicides here and people are prospering on agriculture. The switchover from the conventional cotton to Bollgard or Bt cotton here has led to a social and economic transformation in the villages in the past three-four years.”
Almost three years later, on
28 August 2011, this report was reprinted in various editions of the ToI (and
not just its Nagpur edition) as part of a full-page paid advertisement. This
unusual practice did not go unnoticed. Writing for The Hoot on 6 September
2011, Manu Moudgil looked at what may have motivated MMB to get the story
republished as an advertisement almost three years after the initial story was
printed. Moudgil’s article entitled ‘Got a plant, will republish for a fee’
argued that in 2008, when the story was first published as a news report, as
well as in 2011 when it appeared as a ‘Consumer Connect Initiative’, MMB had
been on the receiving end of severe criticism. In 2008, the allegation was that
the prices of Bt cotton seeds were too high and that consecutive failure of Bt
cotton crops were contributing to farmers committing suicide while in 2011, its
was being alleged that the company was involved in “anti farmer” and
“monopolistic” practices.
Wrote Moudgil, “Also, the news
report says ‘The trip to Yavatmal was arranged by Mahyco Monsanto Biotech’,
the company which has been selling Bt Cotton seeds to farmers since 2002.
Around the same time in 2008…similar news reports appeared in the Economic
Times and news feeds of UNI and PTI which indicates that the company
had arranged the trip for a group of journalists to farms of Yavatmal district.
The reason for such a PR (public relations) exercise seemed to be the flak it
had been receiving from civil society groups in 2008 which blamed the high
price of Bt cotton seeds and consecutive Bt crop failures for farmer suicides.
“So, why did the company get
the extolling story republished after three years without any updates? Again,
the trigger seems to be the bad press it has got recently. On August 9, the
Association for Sustainable and Holistic Agriculture (ASHA), a conglomerate of
several civil society groups including Greenpeace, launched a ‘Quit India’
campaign against Monsanto for its ‘anti-farmer and monopolistic policies’.
Also, the National Biodiversity Authority recently found Mahyco Monsanto guilty
of violating rules in procuring local brinjal varieties for development of Bt
Brinjal.
“The fact that the
original story was also fraught with errors is another important issue. The
story has a blurb on the top saying: ‘Yavatmal district is known as the suicide
capital of the state, but two villages -- Bhambraja and Antargaon -- are an
aberration for the better. Not a single person from the two villages has
committed suicide’. Yavatmal has 2,117 villages of which 1,845 are habited as
per the information available on the website maintained by the district
administration.”
Bhambraja now figures, as
mentioned at the beginning of this story, in the Standing Committee’s report.
On 10 May 2012, Sainath repeated some of these facts in an Op-Ed article in The Hinduprovocatively titled “Reaping gold with cotton, and newsprint”. The article quoted farmers of Bhambraja village telling members of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Agriculture who visited them: “There have been 14 suicides in our village…Most of them after Bt (cotton) came here.”
Sainath wrote: “The 2008 full-page panegyric in the ToI on Monsanto’s Bt cotton rose from the dead soon after the government failed to introduce the Biotech Regulatory Authority of India (BRAI) Bill in Parliament in August 2011. The failure to table the Bill — crucial to the future profits of the agri-biotech industry — sparked frenzied lobbying to have it brought in soon. The full-page (advertisement), titled ‘Reaping Gold through Bt Cotton’ on August 28 was followed by a flurry of advertisements from Mahyco-Monsanto Biotech (India) Ltd., in the ToI (and some other papers), starting the very next day. These appeared on August 29, 30, 31, September 1 and 3. The Bill finally wasn’t introduced either in the monsoon or winter session — though listed for business in both — with Parliament bogged down in other issues. Somebody did reap gold, though, with newsprint if not with Bt cotton.”
Responding to Sainath’s
questions, an editorial spokesman for ToI claimed: “The reports (of 2008) were
written very honestly and in good faith…”
He added that the reports were the outcome of “a field visit organised by Monsanto for journalists from Nagpur.” The spokesman held that “as is the practice on such paid trips, the report mentioned” that it was arranged by the concerned company. He said he was “clueless” as to how the same story appeared in the newspaper’s Mumbai edition nearly three years later as part of the “Consumer Connect Initiative” section, a euphemism for a sponsored advertising feature. On the article getting reprinted, the ToI spokesman claimed: “It must have been picked up by Response” -- referring to the newspaper’s advertising division. He also stated that he had no idea about the full page advertisement that appeared in August 2011 being “followed by several advertisements”.
The day the PSC report was
tabled in Parliament, The Hindu reported that “the Maharashtra
government has cancelled the licence of …(Mahyco) to sell 12 varieties of Bt
cotton hybrids for allegedly giving false information to agriculture department
officials on seed supply for this kharif season.” The company
denied receiving “any official communication from the government pertaining to
the matter of its licence to sell Bt. cotton seeds in the state”.
When contacted by The Hoot, Sainath stated in an emailed
response: “Several members of the Parliament Standing Committee who came to
Yavatmal district were people from rural or farming backgrounds -- and
not about to be hoodwinked by anybody. They brushed aside attempts by the
government of Maharashtra to divert them from visits to the villages that had
been set up as models and miracles (for instance, in Times of India story-turned-ad).
They spoke directly to the farmers in the two villages (including in the
‘miracle’ village of Bhambraja) and not via the media. They found what we had
found when we did the May 10 report in The Hindu that shredded
the claims of the story ‘Reaping Gold through Bt cotton’ which had appeared in
the Times. Indeed, the villagers gathered in large numbers to tell
them how dishonest the images being peddled of their situation were.”
Relevant links:
Times of India, 28 August 2011: http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-08-28/special-report/29937803_1_bt-cotton-cry1ac-bollgard-ii
The Hoot, Manu Moudgil, 6
September 2011: http://thehoot.org/web/home/story.php?storyid=5489&mod=1&pg=1§ionId=&valid=true
The Hindu, P. Sainath, 10 May 2012: The Hindu :
Opinion / Op-Ed : Reaping gold through cotton, and newsprint
The Hindu, ToI’s reply, 10
May 2012: http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/article3401468.ece
The Hoot, Geeta Seshu, 10 May
2012: http://blog.thehoot.org/hindu-takes-on-toi/
Report of Parlimentary
Standing Commmittee on Agriculture, 9 August 2012:http://164.100.47.134/lsscommittee/Agriculture/GM_Report.pdf
Note that the first article on the subject that
appeared in the Nagpur edition of the Times of India, dated 31
October 2008 is not available online.
|
Research assistant: Purav
Goswami
(The writer is an
independent journalist and educator.)
--
Mr Sainath's earlier piece on this issue was carried in http://mediasceneindia.blogspot.in/2012/05/p-sainath-exposes-toi.html
--
Mr Sainath's earlier piece on this issue was carried in http://mediasceneindia.blogspot.in/2012/05/p-sainath-exposes-toi.html
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