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CH Prashanth Reddy Chennai/ Hyderabad
Last Updated : Jan 20 2013 | 8:02 PM IST

Displaced farmers in Andhra Pradesh contesting to highlight their plight.

They are displaced farmers and they know that their chance of getting elected is very remote. Yet, they have entered the electoral fray.

As many as 15 farmers of Polepally village in the backward Mahabunagar district of Andhra Pradesh have filed their nomination for the Mahabubnagar Lok Sabha constituency as independents.

Their purpose is to draw the attention of the public to their plight and also of all others whose lands have been acquired for setting up a special economic zone (SEZ).

Of course, this is not for the first time that the unlettered and apolitical farmers are contesting the elections. They had done so in the byelections held in May 2008. Thirteen of them contested for the Jadcherala Assembly segment, which comprises Polepally. They together garnered over 13,500 votes and all of them forfeited their security deposits.

They were, however, happy at the outcome. They could draw the attention of the people of the state to their prolonged struggle against the SEZ. This time, they want to have the attention of the country.

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The farmers’ problems started in 2003, when the then Telugu Desam government identified 969 acres in Polepally and Mudureddypally villages for setting up the SEZ. In 2005, the Congress government enforced the proposal leading to displacement of around 350 small and marginal farmers. Nearly half of the land acquired was assigned land belonging to dalits and tribals.

According to farmers, their compensation ranged from Rs 18,000 to Rs 50,000 per acre depending on whether it was an assigned or patta land, while the market price stood at around Rs 20 lakh an acre.

The farmers were against the SEZ from the beginning. In 2003, they blocked the Hyderabad-Bangalore national highway in protest against acquisition of lands. The next year, they staged a demonstration before the state Legislative Assembly. A Polepally SEZ Vyathireka Aikya Sanghatana (Alliance against Polepally SEZ) was formed and the struggle continued.

Meanwhile, 200 acres in the SEZ has been earmarked for pharmaceutical companies where Hyderabad-based Aurobindo Pharma Limited and Hetero Drugs Limited are setting up their facilities. Ironically, some of the displaced farmers, who earlier used to grow crops like rice, jowar, horse gram, chillies and vegetable, are now working as daily wage labourers at the construction sites of the drug companies.

The agitating farmers now want their lands back besides abolition of the SEZ Act.They are travelling by the state road transport corporation buses to campaign in villages, bus stops, railway stations and on the roadside. Their rivals in the contest include Telangana Rashtra Samithi chief K Chandrasekhara Rao and sitting Congress MP and industrialist Vithal Rao.

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First Published: Apr 15 2009 | 12:00 AM IST

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