Amid impasse over new laws, protests continue
Item
Title
Amid impasse over new laws, protests continue
Description
Protesting farmer leaders have threatened to close the Delhi-Noida border crossing at Chilla on Wednesday if the three contentious agricultural reform laws are not repealed. On the 20th day of protests, both the protesters and the Centre reiterated their positions and dialed up the rhetoric, but made no concrete efforts to resume negotiations. At a press conference on the Singhu border on Tuesday, farmer leaders said they were “determined to win, no matter what”. “The government is saying they will not repeal these laws but we say that we will make them do it,” said Jagjeet Singh Dallewal of the Bharatiya Kisan Union-Ekta, a Punjab farmers group. The Delhi-Noida border crossing at Chilla will be closed at 11 a.m. on Wednesday if the Centre continues to close the door for farmers, he said. BKU-Tikait group general secretary Yudhvir Singh had harsh words for Prime Minister Narendra Modi himself. “We voted for this Prime Minister but now he is not willing to hear us or talk to us... All farmers now recognise that we made a mistake in voting for him,” he said. Responding to the PM’s allegation that the protests were being funded by foreign money, Mr. Singh asked how the hard-earned money sent by the children of farmers who are abroad could be counted as foreign money. The Prime Minister himself came to power using Gujarati NRI money, he said. Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar met again with farmers of the BKU (Kisan) faction who support the farm laws, and claimed that most of the agricultural community recognised the benefits of the laws. He said the government was willing to continue its dialogue with “genuine farm unions” and is willing to find a solution with an open mind. However, dashing the hopes of those demanding a legal guarantee for minimum support prices, the Minister added that MSP is an “administrative decision and will continue as it is”. Noting that 20 farmers participating in the agitation had died of various causes so far, protestors said a Shraddhanjali Diwas, or homage day, would be observed in honour of these “martyrs” on December 20. Two farmers were killed and one sustained injuries in a hit-and-run case on the Delhi-Ambala Highway early on Tuesday.
Publisher
The Hindu
Date
2020-12-16
Coverage
NEW DELHI