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  • 16 hours ago
India's small farmers are facing fertilizer shortages tied to the war in Iran and the closing of the Strait of Hormuz. What could delayed deliveries mean for farmers and their livelihoods?
Transcript
00:00It's a hard time.
00:01And this fight, like our D.A.P. and Uriya,
00:04we will get hurt and we will get hurt.
00:08We will get hurt and hurt.
00:20We put it in the swimming pool.
00:22It's a big deal.
00:23After giving it to Uriya,
00:27The forest is very important.
00:32If it doesn't get the forest, we will not get the forest.
00:37The forest will be the forest.
00:48And we will not get the forest.
00:51What will we do?
00:52We have to die.
00:53I don't think it's a lot of food and food, but we don't have anything to do with it, right?
01:05Yeah.
01:12Yeah.
01:13Yeah.
01:13Yeah.
01:14Yeah.
01:14Yeah.
01:15Yeah.
01:16Yeah.
01:38The problem is, if we look at the countries which can supply us all these products,
01:45they are not located as near as Qatar was to us.
01:51So basically because of that, the cost is going to increase first.
01:55The fulfillment and shipment time is also going to increase.
02:09The concern actually may not start from right now.
02:14It might start when the season will pick up, when the monsoon season will come, right?
02:21At that point of time, around May, June, July, if the war continues till that point of time,
02:25then it can pose a severe threat.
02:33To be continued out of the war then soon, to remain alive.
02:36The soldiers which have been destroyed, and never killed them.
02:37The soldiers will be killed.
02:37It will die.
02:38The soldiers died.
02:38What do you have it?
02:39The soldiers have the душ."
02:42The soldiers have the mine.
02:43They are the sons.
02:45The soldiers are the sons.
02:45The soldiers have the sons with men.
02:46Пока the soldiers of work are different.
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