Duck farmers want more compensation

At least 4,000 ducks died before 15000 were culled

By :  t sudheesh
Update: 2014-12-03 04:50 GMT
Officials have alerted locals in Kuttanad on various modes of killing ducks and scientifically burying their carcasses, which cannot be left out in the open or abandoned in water. -DC

Alappuzha: While the district administration is  compensating farmers for the ducks culled  on account of   bird flu,  the farmers are also demanding to be compensated for the birds they lost in thousands to the flu before culling was done.

Compensation  for only culled ducks will not make up for the loss they have suffered,  they argue. 

The All Kerala Joint Duck Farmers’ Society on Tuesday in fact demanded compensation for all ducks lost to the fever since April this year.

Said Mr Samuel Pallippad , state secretary of the society, “The government has fixed compensation of  Rs. 100 for ducks  less than two months old and Rs. 200 for those over two months. It will be a relief when the amount actually reaches the farmers and they begin to  revive their businesses.”

The society is also demanding an efficient mechanism to estimate the number of ducks  culled and the exact loss suffered by each farmer.

Farmer C O Thomas from Chennithala, says the  compensation he has received is only enough to buy feed for his birds.

At least 4,000 ducks died before 15000 were culled. I can’t run my business if the  government does not  compensate me for the ducks I lost to  the flu ,” he says.

Farmer KT Kuttappan, who lost as many as 15,000 ducks in Pongapadam in  early November to bird flu, says the government’s decision to give compensation  has given him fresh hope of reviving his business.

“I am spending sleepless nights currently because I  see no way of returning the Rs 8 lakh loan I have taken  from SBT, Edathwa branch. The compensation should be distributed as soon as possible. I have lost all my 25, 640 ducks,” he laments.

These farmers are not alone in their predicament as almost all the 398 registered large  duck farmers are looking at a dismal future unless the government relents and comes to their rescue.

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