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India PM says enough food amid weak monsoon

Twelve dead, 50 missing in northern India landslide
At least 12 people were killed and about 50 missing Saturday in a landslide triggered by heavy rains in India's northern Uttarakhand state, an official said. The landslide occurred in Pithoragarh district, about 450 kilometres (280 miles) from state capital Dehradun. "Twelve bodies have been recovered and the search is on for another 50 people who are believed trapped in the debris of the mudslide," senior administration official N.S. Negi told AFP by phone. The remote hilly region was lashed by heavy rains during the night and rescue workers were searching for members of 11 families reported missing from two villages, he added.
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (AFP) Aug 8, 2009
India's prime minister promised Saturday that no citizen would go hungry as a result of scanty monsoon rains that have threatened the output of rice and other vital crops.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh also promised strong action against "hoarders and black marketeers" after the weather office reported that monsoon rains for the past week were 64 percent below average.

The country of nearly 1.2 billion people was facing a "difficult situation" as a result of the weak monsoon, Singh told a meeting of state chief secretaries called to discuss the impact of the weak monsoon.

But "we are in a position to ensure adequate availability of foodgrains in drought-affected areas," he said, thanks to bumper crops in the past two years.

"In no case should we allow citizens to go hungry," Singh said.

The southwest monsoon sweeps the subcontinent from June to September and is critical to agricultural output in India, one of the world's top producers of rice, wheat and sugar, where just 40 percent of arable land is irrigated.

Singh said rice was the worst-hit crop and that agricultural production had been hit around the country "causing distress to farmers."

Some 141 districts across India have declared drought.

Contingency plans to ensure enough water for crops and drinking should be brought into operation without delay, Singh told the state chief secretaries.

A "close watch should be kept on availability of foodgrains and prices of essential commodities," he added.

Food price inflation, already soaring before the monsoon, has been pushed higher by the poor rainfall. Inflation is seen as hitting the poor masses -- the ruling Congress party's biggest supporters -- hardest.

Economists say the weak monsoon could hurt the economy just as it begins to rebound from a slowdown that has hit consumer spending. The farm sector's contribution to India's gross domestic product is just 16.6 percent.

But agriculture is still crucial as it supports about 60 percent of the population who live in the countryside and fuel consumer demand for everything from TVs and refrigerators to motorcycles and gold.

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