Parliament passed 3 new Farm Bills
-The Farmers Agreement on Price Assurance and Farm Services Bill
- Farming Produce, Trade, Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Bill
- Essential Commodities (Amendment) Bill
1/10
'Contract farming' rules with agri businesses w/o the intervention of middlemen hampers women farmers’ collective bargaining power at local mandis to ensure fair prices.
2/10
Cutting out middlemen who also act as 'informal bankers' dries up an important source of credit for women farmers who have limited access to institutional credit. An Oxfam study in UP observed less than 4% women have institutional credit access.
3/10
The assumption that farmers will be able to sell their produce without spatial restrictions of APMCs, overlooks the barriers of mobility faced by women farmers. Small women farmers might not be able to afford transportation.
4/10
Emphasis on e mandi system: The Bill proposes an excessive use of technology without addressing a gaping gendered digital divide. With an increased reliance on technology, women might be dependent on men to take key financial decisions.
5/10
Instead of focusing on creating more safe and accessible women operated mandis that can collectivize and challenge exploitative male run ones ,a complete de-regulation of the mandi system proves that the erases the existence of women as farmers.
6/10
The silence on MSPs is deeply concerning for farmers who rely on it during drought months. In 2018, The Millet Sisters, a group of women farmers from 12 states pushed for an active recognition of women's knowledge on millet ecology by provision of MSP to support them.
7/10
Women members of producer organizations i.e FPOs will also be affected as they can no longer stock produce at their will. They will now be expected to compete with big corporates w/o a level playing field.
8/10
ECA aims to increase the availability of buyers for farmers to be able to trade freely without any license or stock limit. Marginal women farmers do not have equal networking to secure buyers or current price information 9/10
The Farm Bills reaffirm that the state is oblivious to women as farmers. Women in agriculture continue to be affected by issues of recognition, absence of land rights, unequal access to resources and assets, farm widows & tenant farmers are left bereft of entitlements.
10/10
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#Thread How draft rules Code of Wages Bill affect women workers
Govt of India released draft rules of the Code of wages Bill in July 2020. 1/10 #LabourReforms
Feminist economists and activists say the rules are patriarchal and exclusionary in a consultation by @OxfamIndia. Major points follow 2/10 #LabourReforms
The framing in the Code of Wages Bill is exclusionary of other genders. The definition of worker and workplace is male. This also excludes Transgender persons. The wage slip & Form VI to write the Sex/Gender of the person is missing. 3/10 #LabourReforms
GoI proposed changes to Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act under section 10 2(c) and 10 2(b) of the, to pave the way for auctioning of around 500 potential leases. A #thread on what this means for women in mining areas. 1/13
Govt's proposed reform, under the Atmanirbhar Bharat Scheme, aims to enhance private investment in the sector.
They also aim to increase mineral production and employment, developing a transparent National Mineral Index and clarifying the definition of illegal mines.
The struggles of single women have increased during the lockdown with lack of basic facilities, loss of employment, and increased mental health issues. Yet, they are not recognised in covid support schemes. 1/10
Single women face violation of basic human rights and lack the support they need as society perpetuates a patriarchal norm. They are neither a homogeneous group, and have several intersections that exacerbate their struggle. 2/10
There was a 39% increase in the number of single women – widows, never married, divorced, abandoned from 5.1 crore women in 2001 to 7.1 crore in 2011, according to census data. widows constitute only 18% of the single women. 3/10
1.Withdraw privatization proposals of basic services- health , nutrition (including ICDS and MDMS)
2.Make the Centrally Sponsored Schemes - ICDS, NHM, MDMS permanenent 3. Regularization of scheme workers as workers
1. 4000 as Covid pay 2. Declaration and status as health workers and permanent staff 3. Govt empanelled hospital facilities for treatment of Asha workers
From #Asha workers protest in Haryana.
Pic courtesy: Asha workers Union, Haryana
Image decrpition: ASHA worker holding a placard that reads ' its not for fun we strike. We strike because it is necessary"
1 year since the unlawful amendment of Article 370 and blockade of communication @KReadingRoom report ‘Disintegration at Guns’ shines the light on political, legal, economic and everyday struggle of the people of Kashmir. [1/7]
The report uncovers international and regional developments, laws and policies and perspectives of frontier regions since August 5, 2019, when the amendment was declared without any consultation with the people of J&K. [2/7]
It looks into the growing anxiety of people of #Kashmir by the deployment troop deployment in the valley, and curbed freedoms, anti-terror legislation, arbitrary detention and physical abuse. [3/7]