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Right to Food Campaign
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| Summary of the Initial Petition [W/p (Civil) 196 of 2001] To read to full petition click here The prevalence
of �hunger amidst plenty� in India took a new turn in mid-2001, as the
country�s food stocks reached unprecedented levels while hunger intensified
in drought-affected areas and elsewhere. This situation prompted the People�s
Union for Civil Liberties (Rajasthan) to approach the Supreme Court with
a writ petition on the �right to food�. Initially, the case was brought
against the Government of India, the Food Corporation of India (FCI),
and six state governments, in the specific context of inadequate drought
relief. Subsequently, the case was extended to the larger issue of chronic
hunger, with all states and union territories as respondents. The legal basis of the petition is simple. Article
21 of the Constitution is a guarantee of the �right to life�, and imposes
upon the state the duty to protect it. This right is fundamental. The
Supreme Court has held in previous cases that the right to life includes
the right to live with dignity and all that goes along with it, including
the right to food. The petition argues, in essence, that the response
to the drought situation by central and state governments, in terms both
of policy and implementation, constitutes a clear violation of this right.
The bulk of the petition is attempts to establish this using (government
and field-based) data from Rajasthan. The petition points out two aspects of the state�s
negligence in providing food security. The first is the breakdown of the
public distribution system (PDS). The failures of the PDS arise at various
levels: its availability has been restricted to families living below
the poverty line (BPL), yet the monthly quota per family cannot meet the
nutritional standards set by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR).
Even this is implemented erratically: a survey in Rajasthan indicated
that only one third of the sample villages had regular distribution in
the preceding three months, with no distribution at all in one sixth of
them. The identification of BPL households is also highly unreliable.
All in all, the assistance provided to BPL households through the PDS
amounted to less than five rupees per person per month. The other focus of the petition is the inadequacy of
government relief works. Famine Codes operational in various states govern
the provision of these works, and make them mandatory when drought is
declared. Despite being required to give work to �every person who comes
for work on a relief work�, the Rajasthan government has followed a policy
of �labour ceilings�, which restrict employment to less than 5 per cent
of the drought affected population, by the government�s own statistics.
Actual employment has been even lower, and failure to pay the legal minimum
wage has been reported at many places. The petition demolishes one official excuse for both
these problems, namely the lack of funds. The Supreme Court has already
held that shortage of funds cannot excuse the failure to fulfil constitutional
obligations. In any case, that excuse is singularly inapplicable, given
the availability of gigantic food stocks. The state government has repeatedly
requested free grain for relief works from the central government, with
little success. However, its failure to utilise the quantities already
allotted to it undermines its own case. The petition concludes with a request to the Supreme Court to intervene. Specifically, the petition asks the court to order the Government of Rajasthan to (a) provide immediate open-ended employment in drought-affected villages, (b) provide �gratuitous relief� to persons unable to work, (c) raise the PDS entitlement per family and (d) provide subsidised foodgrain to all families. Finally, the petition requests the court to order the central government to supply free foodgrain for these programmes.
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