SYDNEY - One Australian farmer commits suicide every four days, defeated by
the country's worst drought in 100 years which has left them with dust-bowl
paddocks and a mountain of debt, says a national mental health body.
As drought rolls into a sixth year, stoic farmers are reduced to tears under
the stress of trying to produce a crop and hold onto land sometimes farmed by
the same family for generations.
"One male farmer every four days is committing suicide," Jeff Kennett,
chairman of beyondblue, said on Thursday.
"My fear is that when under prolonged stress and when they see their assets
totally denuded of value, that we will see an increase (in suicides)," Kennett
told local radio.
The rate among male farmers and farm workers is more than twice the national
average, the NSW Farmers Association says.
The figure is all the more worrying because only about 10 percent of
Australia's 20 million population live in rural areas and the number has been
declining for years as the rural economy struggles. The vast majority of
Australians live in cities.
The latest Australian Bureau of Statistics suicide report says 2,098
Australians took their lives in 2004.
Crop losses stretch across the country, 92 percent of economically dominant
New South Wales state is in drought, and farmers have started off-loading stock
before the hot, dry summer when they would be forced to buy feed and water.
With an El Nino weather pattern, which will bring more dry weather and
soaring temperatures, now on the horizon and little prospect of rain until early
in 2007, rural hope is evaporating like water in Australia's mud-cracked dams
and rivers.
Farmers' wives calling talk-back radio in the city describe their husbands'
depression at trudging out into their dry paddocks, day after day, knowing they
are losing money.
Prime Minister John Howard has announced a $350 million
(US$263 million) aid package, but Kennett says farmers also need help coping
with the depression and stress of years of drought.
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