From Our Special Correspondent
Daijiworld Media Network
Bengaluru, Oct 16: With nearly 550 farmers taking their lives in the past six months in Karnataka, two journalists have brought the spotlight on the crisis by making a 28-minute long documentary film on the subject.
The documentary film, “When death strides the fields,” produced by the two senior journalists Maya Jaideep and Kestur Vasuki, looks at the unabated farmers suicides in Karnataka, delving into a plethora of aspects, including market dynamics, state policy, cropping pattern and others that triggered the agrarian crisis.
Case studies of sugarcane farmers and progressive farmers have been done in the 28-minute documentary that also has interviews with experts, farmers, activists and thinkers, according to a release by the journalists.
Global changes, market controls, “unsolicited” farming policy and “impulsive” government doles form the main discussion points in the documentary, which also highlights the Gandhian way and the need to promote organic farming to save the farmers from the agrarian crisis, it said.
The documentary, brought out both in Kannada and English, is due for release towards the end of this month.
The journalists, Maya Jaideep and Kestur Vasuki, travelled with a team of senior colleagues to the suicide-hit districts of Mandya, Tumakuru, Chitradurga, Davangere, Bagalakote, Belagavi, Ramanagara, Mysuru and Chamarajanagara.
The two journalists have to their credit other documentaries including on illegal mining “Heat in Dust”, people’s movement against the Chamalapura thermal plant near Myusuru “Death Knell to the Nilgiris Biosphere” and Daroji bears “Please Bear With Us” to save the space for bears.