“We
demand that the Karnataka state government immediately stop its cooperation
with Israel and reallocate the funds to sustainable agriculture projects that
reflect the demands and needs expressed by farmers movements. We urge
individuals and organizations to join us in building a joint struggle for
justice from Palestine to India.”
In his
second budget as the Chief Minister of Karnataka, H D Kumaraswamy allocated Rs
145 crores to Israeli model farming scheme. This follows from the Rs 300 crore
allocated last year to the same scheme. What this ‘scheme’ entails apart from
micro irrigation technologies such as drip irrigation is still to be seen. Drip
irrigation per se is an elementary technology that farmers have been using for
centuries in India. Yet Kumaraswamy invokes his commitment to Israeli
technology, which came about since he visited Israel last year before being
elected. Since then, the state agriculture and horticulture minister as well as
secretary of state agriculture department have too visited Israel to learn their
agriculture technology.
For all
of these allocations and official trips, let us have a close look at what
really the so-called Israeli technology is, what it is doing in Karnataka and
what has its track record been in the neighbouring state of Andhra Pradesh as
well as Palestine.
Presently,
there is a large-scale project of drip irrigation, the Ramthal Marol project,
going on in Bagalkot district of Karnataka. This project is being implemented
by Krishna Bhagya Jala Nigam Limited with the assistance of Israeli
agro-business firm, Netafim.
Two
decades before Karnataka, it was the state of Andhra Pradesh that was hailing
Israeli technology in agriculture. The Kuppam project of 1998 sought to
demonstrate the Israeli model using drip irrigation for local farmers, much
like the ongoing Bagalkot project. In Kuppam too, Israeli agro-business
companies such as Netafim were involved. An independent study by Deccan
Development society heavily criticised this model for being not only
unsustainable but also detrimental for the local village economy, and several
other experts further condemned this model as “technically unsound, low in
agricultural sustainability, environmentally destructive and economically
unviable. […]Rights of the farmers are totally suppressed.”
Such
outcomes are unsurprising, considering that Israel’s agriculture and its
agro-business firms such as Netafim are not developed to support small farming
communities but to colonize land taken by force from the Palestinian farmers,
who have been expelled from their farms at gunpoint. The model entrenches
illegal occupation and apartheid against Palestinians people that still
remained on their lands. Even for Jewish Israelis, this agro model over time
has become so investment intensive that between 1981-95 almost 50% of the farms
closed down, many after defaulting on loan repayment. And these empirical facts
comes from Alon Tal, who is on the International board of Jewish National Fund,
an agent of Israel’s settler-colonialism, and has been awarded by Monsanto.
The
other major project with Israel is the Centres of Excellence for horticulture,
running in Kolar, for mangoes, Bagalkot for pomegranate and Belgaum for
vegetables. In a recent interview, an Israeli expert at the Kolar Centre of
Excellence was demonstrating canopy technique for mango trees. This technique
is neither new, nor unique to Israel- a regular Doordarshan Krishi Darshan
programme talks about it in its horticulture episodes. Without any discernible
benefits, Israeli model farming has a massive allocation in Karnataka’s budget.
Compare that with the allocation of Rs 10,000 per hectare to minor millet
producers. The average land holding in the state is 1.19 hectares for a
household of 4.5 people.
With no
accruing benefits, it is hard to not suspect that the push towards Israeli
agricultural technology, along with the many visits to Israel by state
functionaries to promote this technology (at the cost of state exchequer) is
more of a diplomatic move. In the above-mentioned interview, the journalist asks
whether Israeli Centres of Excellence would remedy the crisis of farmer
suicides. The Israeli expert and Karnataka state horticulture official seem to
suggest it will. Such trivialization is difficult to believe, but it seems this
is Karnataka government’s solution to this grave issue. The welfare of Indian
farmers, already reeling under a decades long agrarian crisis, is being
sacrificed at the altar of Indo-Israel diplomatic relations.
These
diplomatic relations are those with a regime of apartheid. In its 2004 advisory
opinion on the Apartheid Wall, the International Court of Justice saw the wall
as part of Israeli settlement enterprise which violates Palestinian human
rights and also puts the obligation upon third states and organizations the
responsibility to not aid and assist the this “situation created by the route
taken by this wall”. India is playing with a political disaster by dealing with
Israel’s regime settler-colonialism, illegal occupation and apartheid, and
companies that sustain it.
Several
of them, including Netafim, operate in illegal Israeli settlements which has
also led to United Nations’ Human Rights Commission sending a warning letter to
the latter. Operating in illegal Israeli settlements is violation of the 4th
Geneva Convention and constitutes a war crime. These settlements are built on
stolen lands and resource theft. Palestinians in occupied territories live
under a regime of water apartheid. Farmers are denied access to their own farms
and at times even shot for the same. Exploitation of natural resources of
Palestinians and deploying it for furthering Israeli settlements in occupied
territories is central to Israeli colonialism, and companies like Netafim are
the facilitators of this process of dispossession and colonialism.
By
implementing Israeli technology and giving space to companies such as Netafim,
India is providing legitimacy to Israel’s violation of international law and
Palestinian human rights. Further, this is being done at the cost of debt and
crisis ridden Indian farmers who need sustainable technology and livelihood
guarantees, not an unsustainable and resource consumption-based model which has
so far shown no positive outcomes. Karnataka Rajya Rayatu Sangha has urged the
state government to not introduce Israeli agriculture as it is not suitable and
would adversely affecttheir agriculture.
All
India Kisan Sabha endorsed the Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment and
Sanctions movement,resolvingto denounce and document any cases of Israeli
corporate takeover in the Indian agro-sector and raising awareness among Indian
farmers to prevent Israel and its corporations from reaping profits in India
that finance military occupation and apartheid in Palestine. It would bode well
for the Karnataka state government to listen to the voices from the ground:
stop playing into the myth that is Israeli agricultural technology and becoming
a PR tool for Israel at the cost of struggling farmers. We demand that the
Karnataka state government immediately stop its cooperation with Israel and
reallocate the funds to sustainable agriculture projects that reflect the
demands and needs expressed by farmers movements. We urge individuals and
organisations to join us in building a joint struggle for justice from
Palestine to India..
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