The state administration gave 42-year-old Sardar Barela of Bastanpur Pangari village in Sehore a hand-operated equipment for removing weeds from farming fields and took steps to get his elder daughter admitted to a government school, while firmly dismissing the visuals' veracity.
In a statement issued today, Sehore District Collector Tarun Kumar Pithode said the media "misunderstood" the photo of the girls working with a "Kulpa" (an equipment that resembles a plough) as that of the actual plough.
Based on the visuals, the reports had it that the poor farmer, unable to buy a pair of oxen, had been making his minor daughters pull the plough.
"The farmer concerned in Basantpur Pangri village in Nasrullaganj tehsil was removing weeds with the help of a hand-operated 'Kulpa' from the midst of the already standing maize crop and was not tilling the land as was reported," it said referring to the photo.
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As per the statement, the farmer had sown maize and urad on an "encroached" land of the Forest department where he was carrying out his agricultural work.
Barela yesterday told PTI that he didn't have money to buy bulls and had been using his daughters for ploughing for the last two years.
"I have no option but to ask my daughters to pull the plough who have been doing it for the last two years," he said, adding that neither he had money to educate his daughters, nor was he able to reap the benefits of the welfare schemes of the state government.
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