An affidavit filed by the state government before a bench of Justices Dipak Misra and A M Khanwilkar said the kin of 82 farmers, including the 30 farmers who have committed suicide, have been give Rs 3 lakh each as ex-gratia from Chief Minister's Relief Fund.
It said as per the reports compiled from information given by different district collectors, 52 of the listed 82 farmers had died of various other reasons, but not committed suicide.
Kanna said the state government was also considering waiving loan of farmers taken through cooperative banks, in order to provide relief.
The affidavit said the state has faced the most severe drought in over 100 years and was adopting a proactive approach towards farmers it extended crop loans to the tune of over Rs 4000 crore to over 7 lakh farmers in 2016-17.
More From This Section
The bench said a three-judge bench will take up the matter for hearing.
The apex court had earlier this month rapped the state government over farmers' suicides and said it cannot leave the poverty-struck agriculturalists at the mercy of their fate.
It also appointed appointed advocate Gopal Shankar Narayan as the amicus curiae to assist it in the case.
Noting that the state government was in a position of a "loco parentis (role of a parent) to the citizens", the bench said when there were so many farmers' deaths in Tamil Nadu, "it becomes obligatory on the part of the state to express concern and sensitiveness to do the needful and not allow the impecunious and poverty stricken farmers to resign to their fate or leave the downtrodden and the poor to yield to the idea of fatalism.
The top court had also asked the state government not to treat the plea filed by TNCPIL as an adversarial litigation and take up ameliorative measures to address the agony faced by the farmers.
The affidavit of the state government holds importance as farmers from the state are organizing protests at Jantar Mantar in national capital and had also resorted to stripping outside Prime Minister's Office to press for their demands of loan waiver and drought-relief package.
The drought-hit farmers have been protesting in the city adorning human skulls around their necks and eating rats, trying to grab the attention of the authorities towards their condition.