Now, loans taken from licensed private moneylenders also come under farmer suicide compensation scheme
The Hindu
Legal heirs of such farmers are eligible to get relief, govt. tells HC
Now, legal heirs of even those farmers who ended their lives on being unable to repay loans taken from licensed private moneylenders are eligible to get compensation, the State government on Tuesday told the High Court of Karnataka. A submission in this regard was made before a Division Bench comprising Chief Justice Abhay Shreeniwas Oka and Justice Suraj Govindaraj during the hearing of a PIL petition filed in 2019 by Akhanda Karnataka Raitha Sangha of Shahapur taluk in Yadgir district. The government has issued a modified scheme for compensation for the kin of farmers after the High Court in April questioned the earlier scheme of paying compensation to the legal heirs of only those farmers who had taken loan from banks and credit societies. However, the government’s modified scheme states that legal heirs of farmers who have committed suicide on being unable to pay the loan obtained from unlicensed private moneylenders are not eligible for compensation. The government pays a compensation of ₹5 lakh to the legal heirs of farmers who end their life owing to the burden of farm loan.The election authorities are gearing up for the counting of votes cast in the simultaneous elections to Lok Sabha and Assembly seats in Andhra Pradesh, scheduled to be held on June 4. The Collectors and Election Officers of Visakhapatnam, Anakapalli and Alluri Sitharama Raju (ASR) districts said on May 23 (Thursday) that their teams were ready for the counting of votes.
Responding to the prolonged water scarcity, the residents of the area took to the streets in protest on Wednesday. The protest, which drew attention to their plight, stopped only after the intervention of the police. It was not until 1.30 p.m. that a 4000-litre tanker was finally delivered by BWSSB, providing relief to the water-starved residents.