Final Survey Report
Final Survey Report
Final Survey Report
Sanhati Udyog
A forum of people’s organisations, citizen’s rights organisations, cultural organisations,
little magazines and concerned citizens in support of the farmers’ movement to save
farmland in Singur
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© Sanhati Udyog, 1 December 2006
Sanhati Udyog
18 SURYA SEN STREET, KOLKATA 200 012; TEL: 2241 9263;
CONTACT: SUKHENDU BHATTACHARYA 93309 39011;
AMITDYUTI KUMAR 94333 46109;
PRADIP BANERJEE 2659 6390;
KRISHIJAMI RAKSHA SAMITI (BECHARAM MANNA) 94330 10275
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Dedicated to
Rajkumar Vul
first martyr of the Singur struggle
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On an initiative by Sanhati Udyog, a door-to-door ‘people’s survey’ was undertaken
during November 2-20, 2006 in the six moujas of Singur where 997 acres of farmland
has been acquired by the West Bengal government for Tata Motors to set up a factory.
The idea was to get a detailed, first-hand insight into the villagers’ minds regarding the
proposed factory and the consequent loss of their farmland.
The survey was necessary because Singur farmers had been resisting the takeover for
the past six months and there was a clear case for ‘lack of transparency’ in the state
government’s reluctance to provide information related to the land acquisition process.
The Chief Minister, the Minister for Industries, their cabinet colleagues and
government officials, quoting disparate and random figures, had been repeatedly
asserting that the farmers were voluntarily handing over land. However, the
administration had failed to come up with a detailed list of who had given how much
land. The impression gathered by the ‘Public Hearing’ held in Singur on October 27, in
the presence of Medha Patkar of the Narmada Bachao Andolan and writer Mahasweta
Devi, displayed a different picture. The survey was taken up in response to such
contradictory perceptions.
The team
The survey team consisted of social activists, trade unionists, writers, journalists,
teachers and students. A film crew, a media consultant, a writer and others lent a
supporting hand. The team members trudged miles through dusty village tracks, often
on empty stomachs, stopped passersby on their way to work, knocked on people’s
doors, invaded their kitchens, held court in the open, sat in tea-stalls and sought out
those working in the fields squatting beside the paddy-enveloped project site. They
collected a heap of information by interviewing farmers, checking the land deeds and
mutation documents, filling up questionnaires and noting down their observations.
Fact-gathering by such an amorphous group, lacking in professional expertise and
method, had its limitations. But an investigation carried out in such close contact with
the people was bound to yield the real picture of the impact of farmland-acquisition on
the farming communities of Singur. Needless to say, the most enthusiastic response
came from the people of Singur whose love and warmth will be hard for the survey
team to forget.
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details regarding landholdings and the nature of land run into nearly 2500 pages.
Identifying the landholder with the daag-marks or determining the crop-producing
capacity of each holding from this huge mass of data was next to impossible.
Under the circumstances, the survey team decided to do random sampling in a few
centres in each village, one on each day of the survey. The aim was to cover at least 500
households, landed and landless, and elicit their responses to the land acquisition for
the Tatas. A questionnaire was framed for the sake of statistical analysis.
The survey’s initial focus was on the number of landholders willing or unwilling to
hand over their farmland and the acreage thus acquired by the government. Public
discourse on Singur was centred on this question and it was natural that the issue
received the uppermost priority. However, as the survey progressed, it became apparent
that it would not be easy to draw a clear picture of the Singur situation if the survey
focused merely on the number of landholdings and the amount of land handed over or
not. One, the survey team had no means of checking the veracity of the statements
made by both those who claimed to have given land and those who did not. Two, the
survey team had little access to those who had given their land – they were either
unwilling to talk or were mostly absentees.1
More importantly, the survey team realised that Singur’s economic life revolved around
land and the loss of even a fraction of that land would affect the lives and livelihoods of
a vast majority of people in the area, irrespective of whether they held land or not. If
these sections were to be left out of the purview of the survey, the picture that would
emerge would at best be partial. The survey’s spotlight, thereafter, gradually turned to
the landless land-dependent wage-labourers, sharecroppers and migrant labourers as
well as those employed in land-related occupations such as the cycle-cart drivers, rice
and vegetable sellers, milkmen, cold-storage coolies, so on.
Accordingly, the survey was categorised into two distinct parts:
I Number of landholders and acreage handed over to the government or not. There
was a formal set of questions for this and in a majority of cases the answers were
crosschecked with deed papers.
II A series of case studies of those dependent on land and/or engaged in land-related
occupations directly or indirectly. The idea was to document their relationship with
land, livelihood patterns, socio-economic conditions and how they would be
affected by the loss of farmland.
The survey team found the latter part to be of immense value. It felt that the findings in
this part needed to be highlighted in any public debate over Singur.
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Absentees are not merely the few non-residents but includes those resident landowners of Singur who
make a living out of regular jobs and/or other businesses.
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Singur’s profile
Singur is in Hooghly district and is about 45 kilometres from Kolkata. The nearest
railway stations are Singur, Kamarkundu and Madhusudanpur.
The farmland earmarked for the Tata project stands alongside an arc of the Durgapur
expressway near the Ratanpur crossing with NH1. The six moujas whose land falls
under the Tata project site are Gopalnagar, Beraberi, Bajemelia, Khaser Bheri, Singher
Bheri and Joymollar Bheri. They stand on the other side of the project site completing
the expressway’s arc into a circle.
The area lies between Damodar and Hooghly rivers, a tributary of the former, Kana
nadi, and an irrigation canal constructed during the British period, Daibakh khal,
flowing through it. About 80 percent of Singur’s cultivable land falls under the notified
DVC area. There are 5 deep tubewells and 27 mini tubewells providing water for
cultivation. About 50 households have power tillers.
The crops produced are mainly paddy2 and potato but jute and a variety of vegetables
are also grown in the fields. There are five modern cold storages and a host of
wholesalers’ sheds (arat) in Ratanpur-Singur town.
Landholdings in Singur are small with very few having more than 2 bighas (0.66
acres). About 3500 farming households work their own fields and may be considered as
poor or subsistence farmers. Among the sharecropping bargadars, 607 are registered
and over 1200 are unregistered. There are also landless wage-earning labourers called
kishen in local parlance.
Among the migrant workforce, about a 1000 wage-labourers, called garir kishen, arrive
daily from Bardhaman, Bankura and parts of Hooghly districts to earn their livelihood
from agricultural activities. Around 800 labourers, mostly adivasis from Jharkhand, are
seasonal migrants who work the fields for six-eight months and earn just about enough
to feed their families back home for the whole year. There are also several permanent
migrant families who had come two or three decades ago and settled down in Singur.
A majority of non-farming households in Singur are employed in farming-related
occupations. About 450-500 cycle-cart drivers3 transport crops and agricultural inputs
to and from the fields, nearly 200 households are engaged in animal husbandry and
over 150 households are vegetable vendors in Howrah, Sealdah, Chuchura and the two
local markets. The cold storages in Ratanpur employ about 5000 labourers.
The acreage falling within the tract acquired by the West Bengal government for the
Tata project are: (All these figures are approximations and are based on calculations
made by local people)
Gopalnagar: 330 acres; Beraberi: 270 acres; Bajemelia 110 acres; Khaser Bheri 130
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Two varieties – aman and boro.
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In the Singur thana area there are 1500-1800 cycle-cart drivers and their area of operation overlaps.
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acres; Singher Bheri 37 acres; Joymollar Bheri 90 acres.
In addition, about 65 acres, comprising two bunds, land on which an ashram is located
and land alongside Durgapur Expressway, had been vested (khas) from before. Two
factories, a cold storage and two petrol stations constitute the rest of the 15 acres.
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Kalisaj Majhi, Beraberi: Registered bargadar on 0.80-acre, 4-crop land – his
family of six depend entirely on his earnings – will not part with his land even if the
landholder does so – is actively with the farmers’ movement.
Ratan Patra, Bajemelia: Unregistered bargadar – his entire family works the field
throughout the year except just before harvesting – a part of the earnings from the
vegetables grown on the land is taken by the landholder – earns Rs 12,000-15,000 per
annum (excluding the share of crops) – will lose his livelihood if the land he works is
handed over to the Tatas – active participant in the farmers’ movement
Sanatan Kolay, Bajemelia: Unregistered bargadar – works on 0.66-acre land
through generations – earns 50 percent share of crops – for three months when there’s
no work, he works as a kishen – his family of eight depends entirely on him – the
landholder is unwilling to hand over the land to the Tatas – everyone in his family will
starve if the landholder changes his mind – is wholly with the farmers’ movement.
Mahamaya, Bharati & Shyamali Patra, Bajemelia: Married to three sons
in the Patra family – own very little land and sharecrop – their own land has fallen
under the Tatas – live in a mud hut – twelve members in the family – are with the
farmers’ movement since the beginning – eldest son and youngest daughter-in-law got
beaten up by police in the BDO office demonstration on September 25-26.
Sanyasi Dhara, Khaser Bheri: Landless sharecropper – he and his two sons work
for several landholders – wife runs a small shop to supplement the family income – the
Tata project will take away their livelihood – actively supports the movement.
Shyamal Majhi, Pashchimpara, Gopalnagar: Landless farm-labourer – earns
about Rs40 per day, a little more during potato season – will be fully unemployed if the
Tatas take away the agricultural land – has always been with the farmers’ movement.
Lamji Mandal, Jhapasdanga, Bardhaman: Daily migrant labourer – working as a
kishen in Singur for the last 25 years – earns Rs70-80 a day – feeds his family
throughout the year from this land – if the land goes, his family starves – supports the
farmers’ movement.
Biren Das, Bhurar Garh, Hooghly: Daily migrant labourer – working in Singur as a
kishen for the past 15-20 years – earns Rs100 a day during potato cultivation, otherwise
Rs75-80 a day – feeds his family of 13 for the entire year by working the fields in
Singur – will lose his livelihood if the land is lost to the Tata project – supports the
farmers’ movement wholeheartedly.
Jako, Ranchi: Seasonal migrant labourer – works the Singur fields for six months a
year – lives on DVC bund - earns Rs125 a day with which his family in Ranchi
survives through the year – will be unemployed if Singur goes to the Tatas – supports
the farmers’ movement.
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Paltan Oraon, Paschimpara, Gopalnagar: Migrant farm-labourer from Jharkhand
– gets 130-150 days’ work in Singur – all members of his family work the field during
the peak season – each one earns Rs130 a day, enough for the family to survive for a
whole year. Acquisition of land for the Tata factory will spell disaster for the family –
supports the farmers’ movement.
Utpal Patra, Bajemelia: Vegetable vendor in Howrah and Sealdah markets – sells
100-125 kg of vegetables per day, earning on the average Rs100-150 – eleven members
in the family dependent on his income – the entire family will starve if land goes to
Tata – is with the farmers’ movement from the very beginning.
Pradip Ghosh, Madhusudanpur: Cycle-cart driver, carts vegetables every day from
the field going to the Tata factory – earns Rs50-60 a day with which his family of six
somehow survive – will starve if the land goes as he has no other source of livelihood –
doing everything he can to save the land he works.
Gopal Das, Madhyapara, Gopalnagar: Cycle-cart driver – his brother runs a
vegetable shop in the village – earns Rs 70 a day on the average by carting potatoes and
other crops mainly from the fields to be taken over by the Tatas. His income will
decrease heavily if the Tata factory comes up on Singur’s farmland – his cows, too, will
remain unfed – supports the Farmers’ movement.
Sukumar Ghosh, Madhyapara, Gopalnagar: Cold storage labourer in Ratanpur –
earns Rs50 a day – his income will be severely dented if Singur’s farmland is taken
over by the Tatas – is an active worker in the farmers’ movement
General observations
Singur’s land is extremely fertile and produces more than 2-3crops. Almost all of
those interviewed, including those who have handed over their land, agreed that the
land is fertile, well-irrigated and multi-crop-producing.
Despite rising input costs, Singur’s farmers still want to stick to farming. Provision
of seeds and fertilisers at subsidised rates have been withdrawn this season by the
state government and yet the Singur farmers are expecting to make a big profit from
potato cultivation. In spite of the damage done to two deep tubewells, the
production of paddy has not been hampered.
Compensation is being offered to landholders but not for even registered bargadars.
In most cases where land has been handed over for the Tata project, the landowner
has taken the cheques sharing nothing with the sharecropper
The wage-earning farm-labourers living on the bund running through the land
acquired for the Tatas will not only lose their livelihoods but also their homes.
Every member of the household, including women and children, work in the fields.
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Women are more reluctant to part with their land than men. Women are, therefore,
in the forefront of the farmers’ movement.
Singur farmers are relatively well off. There is no case of malnutrition or starvation
death. Every child goes to school. Every home has electricity and a majority has
telephones and television.
Singur is a peaceful area. There has been no case of theft or similar crime in the
past decade.
Singur villagers never shut their doors and any communal tension is unknown.
There are several clubs in each village indicating a well-knit community life.
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Annex I: SURVEY CENTRE REPORTS
MADHYAPARA, GOPALNAGAR
* Land handed over is more than land owned because one respondent claimed he gave more
land than he said he owned.
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BERABERI
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BAJEMELIA
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KHASER BHERI
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VILLAGE PATH ALONG GOPALNAGAR (SAUPARA TO SAHANAPARA)
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MEMBERS OF THE ‘PEOPLE’S SURVEY’ TEAM
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Pramod Gupta, ANYA CHABI
Aditi Chowdhury, TEHELKA
Bolan Ganguly, WRITER
Krishna Bandyopadhyay, KHOJ EKHON
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