Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
India

'Tea Lady' Basamlu Krisikro, Inspires People To Give Up Opium Cultivation In Arunachal

Darpan News Desk IANS, 15 Feb, 2016 10:24 AM
    The foray of a resident of a village in Arunachal Pradesh into tea plantation inspired scores of people in the area to follow her example with many of them giving up growing opium.
     
    Affectionately called 'tea lady', Basamlu Krisikro, a resident of the remote Wakro village in Lohit district, started tea plantation nine years ago. Her reason was purely personal.
     
    In 2009, her mother was detected with lung cancer and after a successful operation in Mumbai, doctors advised her a regular dose of organic green tea.
     
    A post graduate from Delhi University, Krisikro, who is in her early 40s now, had to go to neighbouring Assam often to fetch organic green tea. It was then that she decided to grow it in her backyard.
     
    Today, many families in Lohit district who were earlier cultivating poppy or opium have followed the path shown by her.
     
    Conventional tea cultivation has been prevalent in some parts of Arunachal Pradesh for ages. But it was not popular in eastern districts of the state such as Lohit, Anjaw, Tirap and Changlang -- which share international borders with China.
     
    Famous for its biodiversity, Arunachal Pradesh shares international borders with Myanmar, China and Bhutan. However, the eastern districts of the hilly state are notorious for opium cultivation, which is a cash crop and fetches huge profits to the farmers.
     
    "The eastern districts, particularly my area (Wakro), has been known for orange plantation in the past," said Krisikro.
     
    "However, the orange production declined significantly over the last several years for reasons not known, forcing the once orange orchard owners to take to opium cultivation in a big way.
     
    "This opium gave them an alternative sustainable source of income and an addiction too," said Basamlu.
     
    Krisikro and a medical practitioner, Nayil, took it upon themselves to convince people that tea plantation could be an alternative source of sustainable income.
     
    "We also motivated the opium cultivators to replace their fields with small-scale tea plantations. And it did wonders. Within a year, at least a dozen of them turned into small tea growers," said Basamlu whose one hectare tea plantation in 2009 has been extended to five hectares now.
     
    Only 12 grams of opium could fetch Rs.650 and one needs to invest only Rs.7,000 for opium cultivation in one hectare of land, which yields about six to seven kg of opium, said Basamlu.
     
    In Wakro alone, there are 12,000 to 13,000 opium cultivators.
     
    "It's really sad to see that the consumption of opium, especially among the youth, is eating away the vitals of our society," she said while expressing happiness that about 12 families in Wakro have totally given up opium cultivation for tea plantation.
     
    She recently set up a tea processing unit so that the new tea planters in Wakro could supply their produces easily.
     
    "Last year, I produced about 3,000 kg of orthodox and organic green tea and my buyers include people from India and abroad," she said.
     
    She said that she had approached the Arunachal Pradesh government several times seeking its intervention to stop the opium cultivation, but to no avail.
     
    "There has been no good response from the government. I tried but failed. Had there been intervention by the government to popularize the tea plantation and as an alternative to opium cultivation, the situation would not have been so bad," she said.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Delhi Shocker: Cop Hits Woman With A Brick Who Refused To Pay Bribe, Arrested And Dismissed

    Delhi Shocker: Cop Hits Woman With A Brick Who Refused To Pay Bribe, Arrested And Dismissed
    A Delhi traffic policeman was on Monday sacked after he attacked a young mother of three with a brick when she refused to pay a Rs.200 bribe. The shocking incident of bribery and police brutality was caught on camera and triggered outrage.

    Delhi Shocker: Cop Hits Woman With A Brick Who Refused To Pay Bribe, Arrested And Dismissed

    Delhi Government Willing To Support New Media Venture: Arvind Kejriwal

    Delhi Government Willing To Support New Media Venture: Arvind Kejriwal
    Interacting with party volunteers on Google Hangouts, he also asked people to compare performance of his government to that of Prime Minister Narendra Modi while claiming his Aam Aadmi Party's popularity had further gone up.

    Delhi Government Willing To Support New Media Venture: Arvind Kejriwal

    Sreesanth Is Proud Father Of A Baby Girl

    Sreesanth Is Proud Father Of A Baby Girl
    Former India speedster S. Sreesanth and his wife Bhuveneshwari Kumari have become proud parents of a baby girl. The child was born a day ahead of Mother's dDy.

    Sreesanth Is Proud Father Of A Baby Girl

    Lord Ram's Birthplace Ayodhya Is In Pakistan, Says Book

    Lord Ram's Birthplace Ayodhya Is In Pakistan, Says Book
    Ayodhya in Faizabad district of Uttar Pradesh is not the original city by the same name as it was inhabited by human beings only in 7th century BC while Rama is believed to have been born 18 million years ago

    Lord Ram's Birthplace Ayodhya Is In Pakistan, Says Book

    India Won't Discriminate On Basis Of Religion: Modi

    India Won't Discriminate On Basis Of Religion: Modi
    "Wherever a (negative) view might have been expressed (about) a minority religion, we have immediately negated that," he said in the two-hour interview. 

    India Won't Discriminate On Basis Of Religion: Modi

    India Inc. Lax On Steps Against Sexual Harassment: Survey

    India Inc. Lax On Steps Against Sexual Harassment: Survey
    Nearly a third of the companies operating in India are yet to constitute the mandatory panel against sexual harassment at workplace, with the incidence of non-compliance higher among domestic entities, reveals a survey.

    India Inc. Lax On Steps Against Sexual Harassment: Survey