Tag: Farm

  • Senate GOP leaders watch debt limit collide with their coveted farm bill

    Senate GOP leaders watch debt limit collide with their coveted farm bill

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    “They’re related for sure,” Thune said of the debt limit talks and farm bill. “For better or worse, pretty much everything that we’re going to do subsequent to the debt limit discussion depends on how all that plays out.”

    Fresh in Senate GOP leaders’ minds: The 2011 sequestration fight, which resulted in steep spending cuts to farm safety net programs popular among Republicans. One Senate GOP aide, who was granted anonymity to discuss internal discussions, warned that any “across-the-board cuts [included in legislation to raise the debt limit], may effectively reduce the investments we are able to make in the farm safety net, trade, research, and other priorities.” The person added that “debt ceiling negotiators need to use a scalpel, not an ax.”

    Thune and Sen. Joni Ernst of Iowa, the No. 4 Republican in the upper chamber, are now among the handful of GOP leaders navigating the debt talks with the White House and the upcoming budget negotiations while trying to protect key farm bill funding. Ernst acknowledged the three legislative efforts are becoming increasingly entangled. As a result, the farm bill timeline could slip.

    “We anticipate it’s going to take a while to get the farm bill done. Sooner is better than later, but it could take a little bit longer,” Ernst said.

    GOP senators are largely supportive of their House colleagues’ demand for cuts to nutrition spending, which ballooned during the pandemic. But they’re less enthusiastic about the idea of slashing key farm safety net programs they’ve long tried to protect.

    Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) said that he expects Senate Republican leaders will likely need to step in to protect certain pots of farm bill funding from House GOP cuts given “the importance of agriculture to our entire economy.”

    While Senate GOP leaders haven’t drawn any redlines, Thune has noted the importance of the farm bill to the rural voters his party relies on. “I think the [House Republican] leadership … understands even though on their right they’ve been getting a lot of pressure to cut, cut, cut in different areas, there are also a lot of members from agricultural states who need a farm bill,” said Thune. That includes his own state, South Dakota, where agriculture is the largest industry.

    And, he pointed out, “If you look at our map in 2024, we got a lot of rural state Republicans who are up.”

    Up to this point, McConnell and Senate Republicans have deferred to House Republicans in the debt limit negotiations with the White House, even as the U.S. inches closer to the June 1 date when the nation could hit its debt limit, according to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen. But McConnell will be attending a White House meeting Tuesday with Biden, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, which members of both parties are hoping could help begin to break the logjam.

    Democrats, meanwhile, are warning that House Republicans’ proposals to slash spending as part of the debt limit deal threaten the viability of the traditionally bipartisan farm bill on Capitol Hill. Democrats are particularly incensed by the GOP push to expand work requirements for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — the nation’s leading anti-hunger program for low-income Americans, which accounts for approximately 80 percent of farm bill funding.

    Senate Agriculture Chair Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.), who is also a member of Democratic Senate leadership, has warned the proposed spending cuts in the House GOP debt legislation would also hit key parts of the farm bill — including critical risk management programs for crop farmers that are still being impacted by the 2011 spending cuts.

    “If the Republicans want to tank a farm bill that’s up to them,” Stabenow said in an interview. “This is the most important rural economic development and farmer safety net in our country.”

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    #Senate #GOP #leaders #watch #debt #limit #collide #coveted #farm #bill
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • WTO needs to look at farm subsidy issue with open mind: Nirmala

    WTO needs to look at farm subsidy issue with open mind: Nirmala

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    Incheon: The World Trade Organisation (WTO) should look at the issue of farm subsidies with an open mind as it impacts the food security needs of emerging economies in the backdrop of Covid pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine war, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman said on Wednesday.

    Speaking at the Asian Development Bank (ADB) Governor’s seminar on ‘Policies to support Asia’s rebound’, Sitharaman said sooner a solution is found out by the WTO, the better it would be for the world.

    “Since WTO was founded, there has been a grievance with respect to the export of agricultural products and generally in trade, the voice of the Global South and emerging markets has not been heard at par with that of the developed countries,” she said.

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    The ‘Global South’ largely refers to countries in Asia, Africa and South America.

    Subsidies for agriculture and poor farmers in developing countries were not counted at all and were frozen, she said, adding that in context of Covid and Russia-Ukraine war, food and fertilizer security have become important.

    “We will all have to talk again (about food and fertiliser security) at the WTO with an open mind,” the minister said.

    “There is better food security in the developed world compared to developing countries. Trade agreements have come about in a lopsided way, for which solutions have to be found,” Sitharaman said.

    Under global trade norms, a WTO member country’s food subsidy bill should not breach the limit of 10 per cent of the value of production based on the reference price of 1986-88.

    As part of permanent solution, India has asked for measures like amendments in the formula to calculate the food subsidy cap and inclusion of programmes implemented after 2013 under the ambit of ‘Peace Clause’.

    As an interim measure, the WTO members at the Bali ministerial meeting in December 2013 had agreed to put in place a mechanism popularly called ‘Peace Clause’ and committed to negotiating an agreement for a permanent solution.

    Under Peace Clause, WTO members agreed to refrain from challenging any breach in prescribed ceiling by a developing nation at the dispute settlement forum of the WTO.

    This clause will stay till a permanent solution is found to the food stockpiling issue. PTI DP JD CS.

    The PTI correspondent is in South Korea on invitation of the Asian Development Bank (ADB).

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    #WTO #farm #subsidy #issue #open #mind #Nirmala

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Sweat behind sweet dates: Life of Indian farm workers in date farms in deserts

    Sweat behind sweet dates: Life of Indian farm workers in date farms in deserts

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    Dates are a staple of the Arab world. For the rest of the world, it is associated with the month of Ramzan, as its popularity reaches a peak in the holy month when Muslims prefer to break the fast with dates.

    Dates or the date palm are mentioned in the Quran 22 times, indicating that the significance of the dry fruit is rooted deep in Islam. The date was one of Prophet Muhammad’s favourite and most desired food items as well.

    Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of Islam, is not only the largest producer of oil but also dates in the world. The Kingdom harvests more than 300 types of dates across the country. Khalas, Sukkari and Ajwa varieties are the most sought ones. Saudi Arabia is also one of the major sourcing countries of dates for India.

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    The harvesting of date is a prime agricultural activity in Saudi Arabia where more than 33 million palm trees in more than 123,000 agricultural holdings exist. Indians including many from Telangana constitute a significant workforce in date farming.

    Dates are high in sugar and vitamins such as potassium and magnesium for consumers but it is full of spine-thorns like the ones on roses, but much larger in size. Working on these farms is not easy and the routine mishap of pricking is painful.

    Mortad Sri Babu, a native of Darpalli Mandal in the Nizamabad district, has been engaged in the harvesting of dates for over a decade in Saudi Arabia.

    “When thorns prick our arms and fingers, we are not able to move our arms for three to four days because of the pain,” he said, adding that the workers also have brave venomous snakes and scorpions.

    Each acre contains 150 trees, and each tree yields about 5-6 cartons of date, equivalent to about a quintal. The crop yields about four months before Ramzan.

    “After the harvesting cycle and production, we prefer to go to our homeland where we can attend the Dasara festival along with our loved ones,” Babu said.

    Babu is among one of the thousands of Telangana date farm workers in Saudi Arabia.

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    #Sweat #sweet #dates #Life #Indian #farm #workers #date #farms #deserts

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Telangana: 23 farm workers fall ill due to suspected water contamination in Mulugu

    Telangana: 23 farm workers fall ill due to suspected water contamination in Mulugu

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    Hyderabad: Nearly 23 farm workers fell ill after they drank water contaminated with suspected phosphorous-based pesticide, from a drip irrigation pipeline in Mulugu on Wednesday.

    The workers were hired by a farmer and deployed to harvest red chillies at Gollagudem village in Venkatapuram mandal.

    According to the police, the incident reportedly occurred when they were having lunch in the afternoon, consuming water unaware of the contamination in it.

    They started vomiting soon after consuming the pesticide-laced water following which they were rushed to Eturunagram Community Health Center(CHC).

    After treatment, 20 labourers were discharged while the condition of the remaining three deteriorated.

    They were later shifted to the government hospital in Mulugu for advanced treatment.

    Last year, more than 50 people, including eight children, fell severely ill after drinking the municipality water in Gadwal.

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    #Telangana #farm #workers #fall #ill #due #suspected #water #contamination #Mulugu

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Farm state Republicans raise alarm over Trump’s new China trade proposal

    Farm state Republicans raise alarm over Trump’s new China trade proposal

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    “There are serious trade disparities that should rightfully be raised, but we should be honest about the potential economic impact to rural America,” said Rep. Kelly Armstrong (R-N.D.).

    Another farm state Republican lawmaker was more blunt when asked about how Trump’s new trade proposal could impact the U.S. agriculture economy, calling it “fucking suicide” for rural communities.

    Trump’s last tariff war with China originally targeted China’s steel dumping but provoked crippling retaliatory tariffs on U.S. agricultural exports to China — hitting farmers who were already struggling financially. Rural families, especially on small farms, felt the economic toll. Farms increasingly defaulted on their loans as China looked to Brazil and other foreign markets for farm exports, even after Trump spent $28 billion in federal funds on bailout payments. Trump eventually signed a trade deal with Beijing that he claimed would result in China purchasing $50 billion in U.S. farm goods, something China has failed to live up to. Tariffs on billions of dollars on Chinese goods put in place by Trump remain today. The Biden administration, which is reviewing the tariffs, has made no moves to ease them in the past two years.

    Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.), a staunch Trump ally, cautioned against new trade moves that could hurt American agriculture. “I can understand what he’s doing — China is our biggest adversary,” Tuberville said. “But we’ve got to be careful about tariffs on farmers.”

    Some GOP lawmakers begrudgingly went along with Trump’s last tariff war with Beijing, in support of the general goal to punish China for intellectual property theft, steel dumping, broader state subsidies and a wide range of other malign actions. But they now caution that the process of disentangling the country’s complex economic relationship with China requires far more nuance than what Trump is proposing.

    “It’s important that we take a protective posture with regard to the sort of predatory practices of China,” said Rep. Rick Crawford (R-Ark.). But “I also know we have such a great deal invested in China, probably trillions of dollars,” Crawford continued, adding that the unwinding of those investments will need to be conducted “forthrightly” and “aggressively” while also protecting the U.S. agriculture economy.

    Some farm state lawmakers, however, lauded parts of Trump’s plans. Rep. John Rose (R-Tenn.), a former state agriculture commissioner, said the proposal to revoke China’s preferred nation trading status “makes some sense.” Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), a potential 2024 presidential contender himself, said tariffs are “the only angle we have to protect our markets from their unfair practices.” Sen. Pete Ricketts (R-Neb.) said he supported tariffs on Chinese goods, especially given that “they’re already not meeting their obligations under the previous trade agreement.”

    And there are a swath of Republican lawmakers who are still uneasy about publicly criticizing the former president, given his pull among a vocal slice of the party. Asked by POLITICO about Trump’s plan, more than a dozen pro-Trump Republicans said they didn’t want to weigh in since they hadn’t seen the proposal yet.

    Rep. Max Miller (R-Ohio), a former Trump aide who is now on the House Agriculture Committee, said he wanted to “look at the language” of any tariff proposals “and who it’s really going to hurt and who it’s really going to affect.”

    “Sometimes it provides a big relief to the bigger consumers within our country,” Miller said. “But sometimes it’s the little guy and the little woman at the end who really take on that burden sharing of actually having the tariff cost them more money.”

    Miller, who has endorsed Trump’s 2024 presidential bid, said he backed Trump’s previous tariffs on China. “I’m supportive of those tariffs,” Miller said, but added, he’s “a little bit different, more free trade individual myself.” Miller went on to say the “Milton Friedman model I believe is the best way for economic prosperity of the entire world,” referring to one of the most well-known advocates of free market trade — a belief system largely shunned by the former president.

    Trump’s campaign didn’t consult key agricultural groups before rolling out his new trade plans — even conservative-leaning groups he was close to during his presidency.

    Trump relied on the American Farm Bureau Federation during his initial trade war with China, as he argued farmers were doing their patriotic duty by helping to carry the financial burden on his larger effort to punish China for its economic tactics. But Zippy Duvall, the ag lobby’s president, said Trump aides hadn’t asked him about the former president’s new trade proposal. A Trump spokesperson didn’t respond to an inquiry regarding the Republican pushback to the plans or whether the campaign had reached out to any agriculture groups about it.

    Some Republicans said that while they haven’t yet seen or reviewed Trump’s proposal, they’re generally leery of enacting new tariffs on China, given the likely backlash on U.S. farm exports.

    “I like free trade. I think that’s what our country is built upon and the sooner we can get back to that, I think it’s going to help our farmers and ranchers,” said Rep. Mark Alford (R-Mo.), a pro-Trump freshman who represents a rural stretch of Missouri.

    “I really don’t have a lot of comment on this at this point, because it’s all speculation, right?” House Agriculture Chair G.T. Thompson (R-Pa.) said.

    Asked if he would support new tariffs on China in general, Thompson replied, “I still think we’re resolving the impact of tariffs now.”

    Steven Overly contributed to this report.

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    #Farm #state #Republicans #raise #alarm #Trumps #China #trade #proposal
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • 7 Persons Held For Farm Fish Poisoning In Pulwama

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    Srinagar, Feb 18(GNS) Police on Saturday said that it arrested seven persons involved in killing farm fish in Bathnoor Shahoora area of South Kashmir’s Pulwama district.

    In a handout to GNS, the police said that on 13th February police post Lassipora received a written complaint from one  Manzoor Ahmad Mir S/O Ab Salaam Mir R/O Bathnoor Shahoora stated therein that some unknown persons have mixed some poisonous substance in water due to which thousands of fishes died in his fish farm at Bathnoor area of Litter Pulwama.

    The spokesperson further stated that upon this information Case FIR NO 9/2023 U/S 428 IPC was registered at PS Litter and investigation taken up. During the course of investigation of the case, by utilizing technical and human resources many suspects were called for questioning from where it has came to surface that some persons have used Bleaching powder for catching fishes at Canal which acted as a source of water for said fish farm, due to which the farm fishes got killed.

    All the accused persons involved in the act have been arrested.

    General public of the area have hailed the role of police for timely action against the accused persons, reads the statement.(GNS)

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    #Persons #Held #Farm #Fish #Poisoning #Pulwama

    ( With inputs from : thegnskashmir.com )

  • Seven Arrested For Poisoning Fish Farm

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    SRINAGAR: Jammu and Kashmir police on Saturday claimed to have arrested seven persons for allegedly killing farm fish in Bathnoor Shahoora area of south Kashmir’s Pulwama district.

    fish poison
    Seven arrested for poisoning fish farm in Pulwama

    A police spokesman in a statement said that on 13/2/2023 Police post Lassipora received a written complaint from one  Manzoor Ahmad Mir son of Abdul Salaam Mir R/O Bathnoor Shahoora stated therein that some unknown persons have mixed some poisonous substance in water due to which thousands of fishes died in his fish farm at Bathnoor area of Litter Pulwama.

    “Upon this information Case FIR NO 9/2023 U/S 428 IPC was registered at PS Litter and investigation taken up,” said the spokesman.

    He said that during the course of investigation of the case, by utilizing technical and human resources many suspects were called for questioning from where it has came to surface that some persons have used bleaching powder for catching fishes at Canal which acted as a source of water for said fish farm, due to which the farm fishes got killed.

    “All the accused persons involved in the act have been arrested,” said police spokesman in a statement.

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    #Arrested #Poisoning #Fish #Farm

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • SSC North Western Region ACCEPT LIST FOR THE POST OF FARM ASSISTANT IN REGIONAL FODDER

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    SSC North Western Region ACCEPT LIST FOR THE POST OF FARM ASSISTANT IN REGIONAL FODDER

    Dated: 13-2-23

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    [ad_2] #SSC #North #Western #Region #ACCEPT #LIST #POST #FARM #ASSISTANT #REGIONAL #FODDER( With inputs from : The News Caravan.com )

  • New book documents revival of Gandhi’s Tolstoy Farm in South Africa

    New book documents revival of Gandhi’s Tolstoy Farm in South Africa

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    Johannesberg: A new book documenting the revival of the historic Tolstoy Farm, the commune started by Mahatma Gandhi during his tenure in Johannesburg at the turn of the 19th century, was officially launched here ahead of the iconic Indian leader’s 75th death anniversary.

    The book titled Tolstoy Farm the Road to Recovery’ was launched on Sunday and shares how Gandhian enthusiast Mohan Hira almost single-handled changed the completely vandalised Tolstoy Farm, overgrown by grass and bush, to where it today has a Garden of Remembrance, fruit orchards, a library and a museum.

    The author, a veteran South African journalist and PTI Correspondent in South Africa Fakir Hassen, shared how this book came about.

    “This book is not a complete historical record of the revival of Tolstoy Farm, nor is it an academic exercise on its relevance today, but rather just a collection of some of what I have reported over the last two decades or so,” he said.

    Hassen has written books on the contemporary history of South African Indians, including three on Gandhi. Gandhi, the father of the nation, was shot dead by Nathuram Godse on this day in 1948.

    The author said the idea of this book was initiated in November 2022 when he joined Indian Consul General Anju Ranjan at Tolstoy Farm as speakers at the official opening of the library, put up in record time by Hira and his colleagues at the Mahatma Gandhi Remembrance Organisation (MGRO).

    “I had known about Tolstoy Farm from the 1970s when I was a young journalist with the Lenasia Times. I recall seeing some fruit trees and the remains of the wood and iron building that was once Gandhi’s home during his tenure in Johannesburg,” he said.

    It was largely left to Hira’s associates at the MGRO and the last few High Commissioners and Consuls General of India to start supporting Hira and his initiatives.

    In the book, Hassen quotes South African academic and prolific historian Prof Surendra Bhana’s essay incorporating the history of Tolstoy Farm in the South African Historical Journal, No 7, of November 1975.

    “Gandhi used the farm much as he was to use the Sabarmati Ashram later in India. One can say that the Tolstoy Farm was a laboratory for experimenting with problematic issues: diet, nature cure, harmonious living with nature, brahmacharya, and so on. It also proved to be a ‘training ground’ – I must add, incidentally – for his leadership among the people and in the politics of India,” Bhana wrote.

    Mahatma Gandhi’s 75th death anniversary was commemorated as Martyrs’ Day the world over on Monday.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )