Watch | Farmers’ Revolution Has Been Suspended, but Without MSP Our Revolution Is Not over – Rajewal

Farmer leader Balbir Singh Rajewal narrates the story of Punjab and the sacrifices that have been made for India’s food security.

On the eve of December 11, the last day of the farmers’ revolution, Indra Shekhar Singh interviewed farmer leader Balbir Singh Rajewal at the Singhu border.

This episode focuses on the future of MSP, along with other issues of the farmers’ revolution, as well as agrarian issues such as debt, falling incomes, environment and market. Rajewal narrates the story of Punjab and the sacrifices that have been made for India’s food security.

Six Major Phases That Defined the Farmers’ Movement in India

From SAD breaking off its alliance with the BJP to the Republic Day violence, the Lakhimpur Kheri incident and the Singhu border killings, the movement successfully forced the Modi government to repeal the laws.

Chandigarh: While there were several ups and downs during the year-long farmers’ protests, there were six major phases that defined the movement and kept it alive.

In June 2020, the Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi approved three farm ordinances that later became Acts in September after they got cleared in both Houses of parliament.

The first phase marked the spread of the farmers’ protests in Punjab, soon after the Union government passed the ordinances hastily. Various factions of the Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) in the state understood the potential impact of these three ordinances on the farmers in the country, and they were the first to begin a protest in the state that reached its zenith by October.

The protests took a concrete shape when different farmers’ unions formed the Sangharsh Committee, comprising representatives of 32 unions, in the state in September 2020 and started staging demonstrations in the form of the Rail Roko Andolan, blocking toll plazas, and holding dharnas against two of India’s richest corporates, Gautam Adani and Mukesh Ambani.

The first political fallout of the farmers’ protest was breaking of the alliance between the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and its oldest ally Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD). This also led to the acceptance of the farmers’ protest among all other political parties except the BJP.

Farm economist Sucha Singh Gill told The Wire that the first defining moment of the protest was when Punjab farmers’ unions realised that holding protest alone in Punjab would not serve their purpose as they needed to involve farmer leaders of other states in order to pressurise the Union government in withdrawing these farm Bills.

“Samyukta Kisan Morcha (SKM) – that later stirred the protest at a national level – was born out of this effort during a meeting of over 300 farmers’ unions in Delhi in November 2020 and the rest is history,” said Gill.

Also read: In Photos: Farmers Brave the Cold as ‘Delhi Chalo’ Protest Continues

SKM’s ‘Dilli Chalo’ call   

The second major phase of the farmers’ protest occurred when SKM launched the ‘Dilli Chalo’ movement and asked all farmers’ unions from across the country to reach the national capital on November 26, 2020. A large number of farmers from Punjab began their march towards Delhi in their tractors and trolleys but were stopped at the Haryana-Punjab border by the police.

Representative image. Police stand guard near a barricade as farmers protest at Singhu border during their ‘Delhi Chalo’ march against the Centre’s farm reform laws, in New Delhi, November 29, 2020. Photo: PTI/Atul Yadav

They succeeded in crossing the police barricades, and also faced lathi-charge but they did not stop.

Finally, the farmers from Punjab reached the Singhu border where they were stopped by the Delhi Police. The Delhi Police offered them Nirankari ground for a sit-in protest but farmers insisted on reaching Ramlila ground. As Delhi Police did not agree to this, farmers sat on a dharna at the Singhu border only, which later became the mecca of farmers’ protest in India.

Another contingent of farmers from Punjab led by BKU Ekta-Ugrahan, which took a different route to reach Delhi, were similarly stopped by Delhi Police at the Tikri border, which later became the second site of the farmers’ movement.

At the same time, the farmers from Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand led by Rakesh Tikait reached the Ghazipur border of Delhi, which became the third major spot of farmers’ protest later.

Days later in December 2020, farmers from Rajasthan led by Yogendra Yadav were stopped at the Delhi-Jaipur highway at Shahjahanpur, which became the fourth spot of farm movement.

“Within few days, the national capital was surrounded on all sides by farmers. Within a few weeks, farmers from other states joined the farmers at these locations and this truly turned into a nationwide movement,” recalled Yogendra Yadav.

During this phase, the SKM mainly focused on mobilisation of farmers and arranging logistics for long overhaul at the Delhi borders. The primary focus of the mobilisation, according to Gill, was on villages in Punjab, Haryana, UP and other states where volunteers were selected to ferry the protesters to the protesting sites on a regular basis.

These volunteers then also looked after the families of those who had left for the protesting sites on a permanent basis. This had a cascading effect in urban areas as well from where a large number of government employees, students and professionals came out in support of the movement and engaged with it through physical presence and also through social media, said Gill.

Centre-farmer talks failed 

As the protests went global from the borders of Delhi, the Narendra Modi government was forced to begin the process of negotiations with them by constituting a three-member committee comprising Union ministers Piyush Goyal, Narendra Singh Tomar and Som Prakash.

There were 11 rounds of talks between the Union government and the farmers between December 3, 2020 and January 22, 2021, but farmers’ unions showed utmost unity and patience as they insisted on repeal of the laws.

Even as the Modi government made several offers to make suitable amendments to the farm laws, farmers’ unions stayed firm in their demands to repeal the farm laws.

It is at this stage when farmers’ unions for the first time clubbed other demands including a legal guarantee to minimum support price (MSP), removal of anti-farm provisions in the Electricity (Amendment) Bill and criminal provision against farmers for stubble burning. They stayed on with these demands till the last day of the protests.

At that stage, there was an opportunity for the Modi government to end this protest by revoking these laws but it had something else in mind.

When negotiations did not proceed further, the farmers announced a major mobilisation programme in the shape of a tractor rally in Delhi on January 26 to put further pressure on the Union government. This was the next major phase of the farmers’ protest that forced SKM and other farmers’ unions to change their strategy to convince the Union government to listen to their demands.

This, according to several SKM leaders, was the first major setback for the farmers’ movement when the tractor rally ended up in clashes between farmers and police personnel.

Also read: The January 26 Violence Was a Result of Police Incompetence, Negligence and Chaos by Design

Aftermath of farmers’ Republic Day clash with Delhi Police

SKM leader Yogendra Yadav told The Wire, “I look at the incident from the organisers’ point of view. Once we knew that lakhs of people would come (in SKM’s call for the tractor march in Delhi), we needed much better protocols. We needed much greater volunteer force. We needed much greater discipline.”

“But having said that, there is clear evidence that when tractors were going towards the Red Fort, no one stopped them. When they reached its gate, no one prevented them from entering the premises that too on Republic Day when security in Delhi is at an all-time high. Policemen were even seen taking selfies with the protesters,” he said.

Farmers participate in a tractor march on Republic Day, as part of their protest against the Centre’s farm laws, in Gurugram, January 26, 2021. Photo: PTI

He said the January 26 incident remained the most intriguing and mysterious link of the protest, which makes one suspect that the state might have been involved in scuttling the protest. During the whole movement, the disruptors were found to be photographed with BJP leaders right from the Red Fort incident to the killings at the Singhu border involving Nihang leaders.

He further said that what happened on the night of January 28 at the Ghazipur border, where police started throwing farmers out, it was a clear attempt to end the movement forcefully.

“The government started from Ghazipur thinking it was a weak link and also they could turn the movement into a Hindu versus Sikh issue. But things changed dramatically on that night because of the bravery of Rakesh Tikait, and finally, we were back on track,” he added.

Was there any change in strategy after the January 26 incident? “One clear change in strategy was that the SKM stopped organising programmes with big crowds because everyone had a clear view that they did not want another ‘26 January’,” he added.

He said the focus then shifted on organising small functions. The programmes with large gatherings were then shifted outside Delhi. When we planned something in and around Delhi, it was done in a more disciplined manner.

Jagmohan Singh, general secretary, BKU (Dhakunda), and one of the SKM spokespersons, told The Wire that after the January 26 incident, there was a feeling that this protest would be over soon since there was such a deep-rooted conspiracy to kill the movement. The protesters were targeted from all fronts – be it the use of excessive police force, turning locals against the protesters or giving a communal colour to the protest.

“It was God’s grace that we were back on track. All thanks to our brothers and sisters from UP who turned the table and put us back into the protest. We then started calling more and more people and regrouped our whole protest,” he said.

He said the SKM also strengthened trust with villagers in and around main protest sites at Singhu, Tikri and Ghazipur. “We held medical camps to help villagers and won their trust back.”

“One major achievement after the January 26 incident was that all those forces who wanted to give a communal colour to the protest could not sustain longer and automatically separated from the protest,” he said.

Bhupinder Singh Longowal, convener of the young wing of Kirti Kisan Union, part of the SKM, told The Wire that all key leaders did not sleep for four days after the January 26 incident.

“We had to fight hard to bring the movement back on track. We were fighting at multiple levels. First, it was important to provide adequate security to SKM leaders since their lives were at risk. Second, we had to stop anti-social elements from causing further damage to the protest. Third, we had to stop farmers from going back to their homes by making regular appeals day and night. At the end, we somehow managed and revived our protest,” he said.

Also read: Farmers Win on Many Fronts, Media Fails on All

SKM’s anti-BJP campaign

One key reason why the farmers’ protest remained alive for long and was highly successful is because it remained apolitical and did not let politicians use the SKM platform to their advantage.

SKM’s decision to launch a political campaign against the BJP was the fifth phase of the farmers’ protest that hit the saffron party hard.

Yogendra Yadav said that it was a very tough decision, given the stand that the farmers’ protests remained apolitical till then.

“But we made our protocols clear. First, the SKM decided that it will not campaign for any candidate. Second, it will not support any political party. Third, its message would be clear, limited and negative, that is to hold a campaign only against the BJP because of the obvious reason that it was the BJP which brought the farm Bills without even consulting the stakeholders,” he said.

“Our action was political but in a limited sense. It was well-targeted and achieved results too in denting the [results of] the party in the West Bengal state elections and other state bypolls,” he added.

Balbir Singh Rajewal, another key leader, said that SKM had no intention to campaign against the BJP in the Bengal elections. “We were forced to take extreme steps because of the negative attitude of the BJP government against our demands,” he said.

Police personnel have placed iron nails near barricades in an attempt to stop protesting farmers from crossing the Tikri border. Photo: PTI

“When SKM leaders landed in West Bengal for the first time, we had no preparations at all. We just had two tractors on rent and a handful of Punjabi supporters. There was not much of a crowd on the first day of our campaign. But I was surprised when people from Bengal started coming with us. Then I realised that there was no chance we would lose now. Days later we held several packed rallies and ultimately made the BJP defeat there,” he said.

He further said that after West Bengal, SKM began its UP mission. “Our first rally in Muzaffarnagar was highly successful despite communal tension in the area. You would be surprised that more than 500 langars were organised by Muslims in the area. The crowd was overflowing in the rally. There was a huge crowd spreading over several kilometers,” he said.

“It was not without a reason that the Modi government started thinking of revoking the laws as the SKM began hitting them politically,” he added.

Also read: The Lakhimpur Kheri Incident Didn’t Occur by Chance, It Was a Long Time Coming

Lakhimpur Kheri and aftermath

The sixth and the last phase of the farmers’ protest can be attributed to the circumstances emerging out of the killing of four farmers in the Lakhimpur Kheri incident in UP. The protesting farmers were killed by a VIP convoy allegedly including Union minister Ajay Kumar Mishra’s son Ashish Mishra, who was arrested a week after the incident.

The brutal killing at the Singhu border was seen as another attempt to malign the farmers’ movement, but it could not derail the protest.

Weeks later, the prime minister on November 19 finally repealed these three controversial farm laws. Later on December 9, it sent another letter to the SKM, giving assurance to resolve other pending demands of the farmers, thereby paving the way for the farmers to suspend their historic protest.

“No prime minister in this country wanted to be remembered as anti-farmer and that must have been one of the major considerations of Modi in finally succumbing to the pressure of the farmers. Second, Modi must have assessed that things in the border state of Punjab were turning delicate due to the farmers’ protest. No prime minister could afford to face another trouble in the backyard when problems in Kashmir valley will be prolonged for years to come due to the decision of the BJP government to read down Article 370,” Yogendra Yadav said.

He added, “Finally, I think BJP’s internal opinion polls in UP finally forced Modi to announce the repeal of the farm laws. In this decision, the Lakhimpur Kheri incident had a huge role to play. This blatant episode earned them such bad publicity at all-India level that they had to defend themselves at all costs.”

He also said that the role of the media during the farmers’ movement played an important role and should be discussed. He said the entire mainstream media had ganged up against the movement and ran such shameful stories that it will go into the textbook of journalism on how not to do journalism.

“The farmers’ movement was so strong on the ground that instead of affecting the movement, mainstream media ended up affecting its own image. A middle-class movement would have been finished with the kind of lynching the media attempted during the farmers’ protests. But in this case, it failed miserably and ended up affecting its own credibility in a very serious manner,” he said.

He said it will now take them years to recover from it. The fact that the common people have started using the term ‘Godi Media’ is proof of it.

‘Attack on Agitators Felt Personal’: Farmer Leading Convoy of 10,000 Women Protesters

Harinder Bindu, from Bhatinda, has been a farmer for 30 years. But she is not ready to have women thrown under the bus over three laws.

New Delhi: A convoy of at least 10,000 women protesters making its way towards Delhi from 14 districts across Punjab is being led by a woman farmer herself.

Harinder Bindu, from Bhatinda, has been a farmer for no fewer than 30 years.

Bindu has lived her entire life in Punjab with her son, brother, sister-in-law and parents. A high school graduate who went to a local school in Bhatinda, Bindu had taken an interest in farming from an early age.

All was well until the Centre brought three highly controversial farm laws, against which farmers from around the country and especially in Bindu’s home state of Punjab have been protesting for the past couple of months.

On November 26, thousands of farmers from Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, Uttarakhand and Uttar Pradesh, who had begun a ‘Delhi chalo’ movement to voice their concerns at the National Capital, met with water cannon, teargas shells, barbed wire and barricades.

Also read: Farm Laws: Arrests, Heavy Police Deployment as Protestors Begin March Towards Delhi

This “attack” on farmers, she says, feels personal to her.

The farmers are apprehensive of private companies taking over the market and exploiting them. The law, they have alleged, will make for the protection of the minimum support price (MSP) to be taken away. They are demanding that these laws be scrapped, or a new law be made guaranteeing them MSP on their produce.

A protester at the Nirankari Grounds. Photo: Ismat Ara/The Wire

Why women? 

The large number of women protesters has been a noteworthy aspect of the farmers’ march to Delhi. Bindu feels that the time is ripe for women to come out in large numbers now. She, like others, have brought along cooking essentials and rations to last them for the length of the protest.

“The three laws brought by the Modi government will impact women in a very different way,” said Bindu.

She says that even though all Indians will be affected adversely by these three laws, women need to raise their voices more because the kitchen, which is considered their departments, will come to a “halt with this law.”

“If the farmers’ are affected, they will not be able to earn enough money to sustain their households. This will impact women as they will have to control the portions of meals that they cook,” she says, adding that children will also be affected ultimately.

This is not all. She says that when farms stop generating enough income, women will have to go out to work in areas where there are no guarantees for their safety.

Bindu, along with her family and others, left her house on November 25. Three days later, she is still not in Delhi. Till the time of publishing of this article she was still 30 km away. “They had sealed the borders, the police were beating protesters, we had to stay behind considering the safety of all the women with us,” she says.

Near Mandi Dabwali, Punjab Haryana border, woman farmers sit in a dharna. Photo: By arrangement.

Hundreds of vehicles, thousands of men and women, but all of them have three simple demands.”Withdraw the three farm acts, abolish electricity (amendment) bill and bring a new law ensuring an MSP for the farmers,” she says. Ultimately, their land is their primary asset, she says. 

The Electricity (Amendment) Bill, 2020 seeks to set up an Electricity Contract Enforcement Authority (ECEA) which will have the power of a civil court to settle disputes related to power purchase agreements between distribution companies and power generation companies.

Farmers’ Protest LIVE Updates | ‘Will Sit at Delhi Border Till Permission Given to Go to Jantar Mantar,’ Say Protesters

Sustained protests by farmers against the Centre’s new farm laws have culminated in a two-day rally on November 26 and 27.

New Delhi: As part of the ‘Dilli Chalo’ protest called for November 26 and 27, more than three lakh farmers, including over two lakh protesters from Punjab alone, have reached the Delhi border. The BJP governments in Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand have adopted severe repressive measures arresting more than 100 local farmer leaders, detaining several others and preventing movement through states.

On Friday morning, farmers overcame barricades placed by the police and began marching towards Delhi. Those who had been stopped at the borders at Uttar Pradesh and Haryana have sat down on dharnas on the roads.

On Saturday, protesters, who have arrived at the Delhi border from Punjab, have refused to go to the Nirankari Ground in Burari. This was decided at a meeting of senior leaders held at Kundali in the morning today.

We will bring you live updates from the protests through the day, as and when they happen.

Note: The live blog may take a little while to load.


Watch | ‘Protesting Farmers Don’t Have the Right to Have Their Voices Heard in Delhi’

The BJP governments in Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand have adopted severe repressive measures to stop them.

As part of the ‘Dilli Chalo’ protest called for November 26 and 27, more than three lakh farmers, including over two lakh protesters from Punjab alone, have reached the Delhi border. The BJP governments in Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand have adopted severe repressive measures, not just limited to arresting more than 100 local farmer leaders, detaining several others and preventing movement through states but also in unleashing water cannon and teargas shells to stop the marches.

Arfa Khanam Sherwani, senior editor of The Wire spoke to social activist Medha Patkar and farmer rights activists Hannan Mullah and Kavita Kuruganti on the attitude of the respective state governments.

Farm Laws: Arrests, Heavy Police Deployment as Protestors Begin March Towards Delhi

The indefinite strike against the Centre’s farm laws starting November 26 is a coming together of at least 420 farmers organisations nationwide.

Mohali: Over two lakh farmers and members of trade unions, student organisations and artiste collectives from across the country have started mobilising for the march towards New Delhi to mark their protest against the three recent farm laws passed by the BJP government at the Centre in September this year in a rushed manner.

According to sources, at least 100 farm union members, especially in Haryana have already been arrested. Around 500 farmers have been arrested in Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. Prominent farmer leaders Rishipal Ambawata and P. Ayyakannu have also been placed under house arrest by the administration.

The largest groups of protesters are marching from Punjab, Haryana, Uttarakhand and Uttar Pradesh. Protestors who manage to enter Delhi despite heavy barricading by the Delhi, Haryana and the Uttar Pradesh police from all sides, plan to set up indefinite protests sites wherever they can. Those who will not be allowed to cross the border will set up stages and tents on the outskirts of the national capital.

According to media reports, the Karnal deputy commissioner has imposed Section 144 in the area to stop farmers from marching towards Delhi.

Farmers at the Punjab-Haryana border. Photo: Special arrangement

After crossing the barricades at Ambala, hundreds of farmers faced water cannons at Kurukshetra.

“More than two lakh people will be joining from Punjab,” Joginder Singh Urgahan of the Bharatiya Kisan Union Ekta (Ugrahan) told The Wire.

Protestors  from Punjab are moving towards Delhi in tractors and trolleys along with rations, tents, stage set-ups, speakers and everything else they can carry to show their anger against the Centre.

“More than 26,000 women are going to be part of these indefinite strikes,” said Harinder Bindu of the BKU (Ugrahan), who has been mobilising women in village after village in Punjab these past few weeks.  Entire families, along with children and  all cooking essentials have been stocked, Bindu said.

Also read: Delhi Police Refuse Permission for Farmers’ ‘Delhi Chalo’ Protest March

Protesting women, some of whom are farmers, some daily-wage workers and some who are widows of farmers who died by suicide, are all marching to New Delhi to show their anger Centre’s policies. In the last few days, most of these women have crowdsourced ration from various households in different villages to take with them to New  Delhi.

“The people of Punjab are making history”, Joginder Singh Ugrahan said.

From Punjab, artist groups are also all set to stage plays and sing songs at protest sites, wherever they can. Amolak Singh of the Punjab Lok Sabhyachaar Manch told The Wire that street plays and protest songs will be sung. He said that over two dozen artists are going to be performing and they are carrying everything that they need with them.

The Punjab Lok  Sabhyachar Manch is one of the many artist groups which has been actively participating in the protest against the farm laws in Punjab. Over the past few weeks, they have been taking out traditional ‘jaago’, or night rallies, singing protest songs and urging people to join them in the movement.

‘Jaago’: a night march being carried out in Punjab. Photo: Special arrangement

Abhimanyu Kohar of the Rashtriya Kisan Morcha told The Wire that the protestors are very determined. He confirmed that around 1,000 protests have already arrived at the Majnu Ka Tila Gurudwara in New Delhi.

“We will now decide where set-up our camp – at Rajghat or at Jantar Mantar, we don’t know”, he said.

According to Kohar, the Jabalpur Festival Express train, in which many protestors were travelling to Delhi from Madhya Pradesh, has been cancelled by the administration.

Also read: Three Farm Bills and India’s Rural Economy

From the south of India, many farmers are on their way in trains. Kavitha Kuruganthi, the national working group member of the All India Kisan Sangharsh Committee (AIKSCC), told The Wire that farm union leaders from Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Kerala are on their way in the hundreds but because lack of public transportation due to coronavirus, many protests are being mobilied locally to show support.

Kuruganthi said that in Tamil Nadu around 500 protests will be held, blocking rail tracks and roads. In Jharkhand, protestors plan to occupy the governor’s house. In Karnataka, ‘Graameen Harthal’, or village strikes will be taking place. In West Bengal also farmers’ unions will be mobilising locally.

Farmers mobilising in Tamil Nadu. Photo: Special arrangement

From Madhya Pradesh, activist Medha Patkar is on the way with over 200 farmers and daily-wage workers. “We  are on our way, all of us, more people will join as we go,” she told The Wire in a brief, patchy telephone conversation.

From Uttarakhand, the chief of the Tarai Kisan Union, Tejinder Singh Virk told The Wire that 300 trolleys and tractors will  start on the morning of November 26.

Virk said that in the neighbouring state of Uttar Pradesh, most farmers are not being allowed to mobilise or gather and many farm union leaders are being sent notices.

Kavita Kuruganthi also said that in Uttar Pradesh, the printing of  pamphlets and leaflets about the protest is also being stopped at many places.

The indefinite strike against the Centre’s farm laws starting November 26 is a coming together of at least 420 farmers organisations nationwide. The protest is happening under the banner of Sanyukt Kisan Morcha.

Delhi Police Refuse Permission for Farmers’ ‘Delhi Chalo’ Protest March

The ‘Delhi Chalo’ march will be held on November 26 and 27 in protest against the recently passed farm laws and the minimum support price system.

New Delhi: The Delhi Police on Wednesday asserted that it has rejected all requests received from various farmers’ organisations to protest in the national capital against the Centre’s new farm laws. This comes a day before the ‘Delhi Chalo’ march, which is to be held on November 26 and 27 in protest against the recently passed farm laws.

The police had on Tuesday said legal action would be taken against the protesting farmers if they come to the city for any gathering amid the COVID-19 pandemic outbreak.

The farmers will reach Delhi on November 26 through five highways connecting the city as part of their ‘Delhi Chalo’ march call.

Taking to Twitter, the city police said requests have been rejected for any such gathering in the national capital.

“Please co-operate with Delhi Police in ensuring no gathering in Delhi amid coronavirus, failing which legal action will be initiated as per law,” it said.

The All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee (AIKSCC), Rashtriya Kisan Mahasangh and various factions of the Bharatiya Kisan Union have joined hands and formed a ‘Samyukta Kisan Morcha’ to press the central government to scrap the three farm laws.

The protest has the support of over 500 farmers’ organisations.

A seven-member committee has also been formed to coordinate the operations of the Morcha.

Farmers have expressed apprehension that the new laws would pave the way for the dismantling of the minimum support price system, leaving them at the “mercy” of big corporates. They have been demanding that the laws be repealed.

Also read: Three Farm Bills and India’s Rural Economy

The ‘Delhi Chalo’ rally

The Haryana Police is looking to seal its borders to prevent farmers from marching towards the national capital, and has put in place traffic diversions on four major national highways leading to Delhi, the Hindustan Times reported. Traffic will be diverted or blocked on Ambala-Delhi, Hisar-Delhi, Rewari-Delhi and Palwal-Delhi national highways on November 25, 26 and 27. In Punjab, entry from the districts of Panchkula, Ambala, Kaithal, Jind, Fatehabad and Sirsa will also be blocked, the report said.

Haryana has imposed section 144 of the CrPC to prevent the assembly of protesters.

Haryana farmers said that they will be helping Punjab farmers at all the 10 border entry points from where jathas will enter Haryana, Indian Express said in a report.

Punjab farmers have reached the state’s borders with Haryana to make arrangements of langar for the group of farmers who will be heading towards Delhi, and farmers in the neighbouring areas of Haryana are reaching out to their counterparts in Punjab to help them with milk supplies, vegetables, the report added.

The Delhi rally is expected to witness at least one lakh farmers to be coming only from Punjab, 50,000 from Haryana, and another two lakh from surrounding states like western Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh. There will be cavalcades of farmers moving from all corners of the country emerging into Delhi.

AIKSCC leader Avik Saha told The Wire, “The Delhi Police is acting as an agent of the central government which is trying to destabilise and discredit the farmers’ movement. If the central government can call farmers for meeting to Delhi, it can also allow the farmers to protest. The central government are clearly scared of images that lakhs of farmers are coming to Delhi to protest.”

They had applied for police permission for Ramlila Maidan for accommodation of the farmers, and Parliament Street as the protest venue.

(With inputs from PTI

Loss to Farmers in Kashmir Could Be More Than Rs 7,000 Crore: Farmers Body

A delegation under the banner of All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee which visited the Valley last week has asked the government compensate farmers for the losses.

New Delhi: After a three-day visit to the Kashmir Valley, a seven-member delegation has asked the government to compensate farmers for their losses owing to the unseasonal snowfall in early November and the communications blockade and travel restrictions imposed on the region by the Centre after its August 5 decision to read down Articles 370 and 35A of the Indian constitution.

The delegation under the banner of the All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee (AIKSCC) included former MP Raju Shetty, social scientist and politician Yogendra Yadav and farm leader V.M. Singh. It was in the Valley for a period of three days last week and met farmers, representatives of the fruit growers’ association and members of the trading community to try and assess the loss suffered by farmers.

Also read: Kashmir: Centre’s Feeble Attempts to Procure Apples Are Not Bearing Fruit

According to its assessment, the severe security clampdown post August 5 effected the transport industry and procurement markets just as the harvest season began. It said that farmers who grew pear, cherry and grapes suffered nearly a complete loss as their crop was left stranded due to the extraordinary security arrangements imposed by the Centre.

Apple growers suffered too as the communications blockade meant that communication between growers, transporters and traders was made nearly impossible. The restrictions on transport also hampered the procurement process.

“Farmers could not bring apples to the procurement markets since trucks were not allowed to go to the villages and farmers were forced to bring their produce to the Highways. This caused delays, inconvenience and additional costs,” a section of the AIKSCC report read.

Also read: Why Apple Procurement in J&K Will Not Be Easy

It also said that the government’s announcement that NAFED would procure apples in the valley has not worked. “Lack of experience and infrastructure meant that NAFED has procured 0.01% of the estimated produce (1.36 lakh boxes out of more than 11 crore boxes). The farmers have complaints that NAFED procurement had disruptive effect since it has sold apple in the sale market at lower prices that brought down the wholesale apple prices in the procurement market,” it noted.

The heavy unseasonal snowfall that most of the Valley encountered on November 7 has been cited by the delegation as another reasons for the mounting losses of farmers. According to AIKSCC, farmers and farm organisations have reported over 80% losses in the regions of Shopian, Ramnagar, Kellar, Jamnagar, Sedaw and Mirpur.

The government’s own estimate says that about 35% of the 23,640 hectares of orchard land was damaged due to the snowfall.

Saffron crop was also impacted and according to the delegation’s report about a sixth of the crop could be damaged.

Also read: Kashmiri Farmers Struggle to Sell Bumper Fruit Harvest

Overall, the delegation has said that according to representatives of commerce and industry, the apple industry alone could have suffered a loss of about Rs 7,000 crore due to the security clampdown in the state since August 5 and the unseasonal snowfall in early November,

It has recommended that the government declare the ‘apple crisis’ a ‘natural calamity’ eligible for the National disaster relief fund. The AIKSCC has also demanded that farmers be compensated for the loss suffered, including the long-term damage due to the damage caused to apple trees which take several years to bear fruit.

Farmers’ Body Cautions Govt About Risk of Drought, Seeks Proactive Measures

“Clearly we are looking at what could turn into a national emergency,” the All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee said in a press release.

New Delhi: The All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee (AIKSCC), a coalition of about 200 farmer organisations from across the country, has raised concern over the possibility of a ‘second consecutive drought in large parts of the country’.

The monsoon has made slow progress in its early days and the rainfall deficit is 43% from the long period average, according to the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) on June 20. 

Coupled with the previous monsoon, which recorded a 9% deficit last season with larger deficits in many parts, a weak monsoon this year could lead to a difficult situation with around 46% of the country already suffering from drought, according to IIT Gandhinagar’s drought early warning system – a real time drought monitoring too.

“Clearly we are looking at what could turn into a national emergency,” the AIKSCC said in a press release.

It also pointed to the low water levels in major reservoirs in the country. The situation is particularly severe in Andhra Pradesh with storage 83% below normal, Maharashtra at 68% below average and Tamil Nadu  at 41% below normal.

Also read: Exclusive: Centre’s Crop Insurance Scheme Fails the Drought Test, 40% Claims Unpaid

“There are widespread media reports about water crisis forcing exodus from villages, wilting away of standing horticultural crops, death of cattle and local conflicts over water sharing. This has naturally affected sowing,” the AIKSCC noted.

Compared to 2018, kharif sowing till June 14 was down 9%. The sowing of pulses was the worst affected as it was 50% below the level of sowing at the same time last year. Oil seed sowing is 41% lower while paddy and coarse cereals are down 22% and 27% respectively.

In light of this situation and the risk of a weak monsoon in the coming months, the AIKSCC has urged the government to not delay declaring a drought. Instead, the government should declare a drought in all those districts were sowing has been affected by more than 50% in the month of June, according to the AIKSCC.

Also read: Monsoon Arrives in Kerala After a Week’s Delay

The farm body has also demanded that a special national package should be announced by the Centre, input subsidy should be revised to Rs 10,000 per acre for unirrigated land, and the number of days of employment should be increased to 150 under MNREGS.

The AIKSCC has also noted that the delays in payment under Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) must be addressed and full and timely payment must be ensured.

The Wire had recently reported that for kharif 2018, a season impacted by rainfall deficit in monsoon of 2018, 40% of claims under crop insurance remain unpaid as of May 2019, more than three months after the last date on which they should have been paid.

Farmers March to Express No Confidence in Govt, Stopped a Kilometre From Parliament

Around 1,500 farmers from across the country congregated in Delhi to protest the MSP ‘hike’ and passed their own ‘no-confidence motion’ against the government.

New Delhi: In a show of strength on July 20, farmers from several states, under the banner of All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee (AIKSCC), marched in New Delhi to “express no confidence in the Narendra Modi government”.

The protestors alleged that the Modi-led National Democratic Alliance at the Centre has reneged on all its election promises made to farmers and has attempted to mislead farmers on the issue of minimum support price (MSP). Farm leaders from across the country were also joined by several political leaders including members of parliament.

Around 1,500 farmers, who travelled several thousand kilometres, gathered at Barakhamba Road as the heavy morning rain subsided. From Faridkot in Punjab, 56-year-old Balraj Singh travelled 400 kilometres to be a part of the protest. The owner of four acres of land – he’s a small farmer by the government’s definition – he grows wheat in the rabi season and rice in the kharif season. Wearing a white kurta-pyjama, and sitting on the pavement in one of the by-lanes in the area, he held a poster with text in yellow and background in black. “Neta raaj jaayega, kisan raaj aayega (The rule of politicians will end, farmers will rule),” the poster read.

Farmers hold up placards at the protest in New Delhi on July 20, 2018. Credit: The Wire

Singh’s immediate concern is the repayment of a crop loan of Rs 2 lakh on his Kisan Credit Card. “There is no profit from growing any crop. Even with wheat and rice, where we get the MSP, we are making losses. Loans keep piling up,” said Singh as several other farmers who had travelled with him from Faridkot joined in. “Modi has said that he has given us a profitable price. But where is it?” a farmer said, pulling his empty pockets inside out to elucidate his point.

Humare chehre pe likha hai kya ki hum bewakoof hain? Aap kehte ho ki aapne de diya. To kisan atm-hathya kyun kar raha hai (Do our faces say that we are stupid? You say that you have provided profitable prices. Then, why are farmers committing suicide?)” asked a farmer who identified himself as Bhagat Singh. “You tell everyone that I am Bhagat Singh. I am his spirit. Every farmer in Punjab today is his spirit.” He brought out a poster with Bhagat Singh’s picture on it. The text on the poster read, “Lagta hai wapas aana padega (Looks like I will have to come back).”

“Half of my wheat was destroyed because of pests. Then, the cost of inputs like urea, fertilisers and diesel has gone up hugely. I did not earn a single rupee. Even Amarinder has gone back on his promise of loan waiver,” Balraj Singh said, referring to Punjab chief minister Captain Amarinder Singh’s promise of farm loan-waivers prior to the 2017 Punjab assembly elections.

The chief minister had promised that if he is voted to power in Punjab, he would provide farmers a loan waiver to ease their financial stress. However, despite almost 17 months in power, Singh’s government has yet to fulfil its promise. As a result, farmers in the state have been agitating against the Congress government. 

A group of farmers from Faridkot in New Delhi on July 20, 2018, at the protest organised by AIKSCC. Credit: Kabir Agarwal/The Wire

Hamam mein sab nange hain. Chahe Congress ho ya BJP. Agar hum Modi ke khilaf bolte hain to hum Amarinder ke khilaf bhi bolte hain (Everyone is naked in a bath. Whether it is Congress or the BJP. If we stand against Modi, we also stand against Amarinder),” said 80-year-old Ajeet Singh from Moga in Punjab. “Jab tak zinda hoon, apne hakk ke liye ladunga (I will fight for my rights till I am alive),” Singh said as he walked gingerly with the help of a narrow stick to join the other farmers who had started walking towards the road to begin their march.

Police personnel wearing helmets, carrying fibre shields and fibre lathis – brand new with their plastic covers intact – lined the roads and blocked traffic on the usually busy Barakhamba road. Farmers holding India flags, black flags, red flags, green flags, posters, banners, back-packs, polythene bags began gathering on the road. A group of farmers sitting comfortably outside the massive gate of a palatial house opposite Modern school were the last to get up and join the protestors.

Credit: Kabir Agarwal/The Wire

Leaders of the various organisations that form the AIKSCC gathered at the head of protests and asked the protesting farmers – via megaphones – to proceed in an orderly fashion. In the middle of the queue of farmers, a group wearing yellow bandanas started chanting slogans. “Desh ki mitti, desh ki shaan. Jai jawan! Jai kisan!”. “Kaun banata Hindustan? Bharat ka mazdoor-kisan”. “Modi teri tanashahi nahi chalegi!”.

As the farmers began walking on Barakhamba Road, passers-by on motorcycles and in cars stopped to look. One middle aged man on a motorcycle stopped – with little care for traffic behind him – to ask us, “Kya masla ho gaya bhaisahab? (What is the issue?)” Before we could answer, a farmer participating in the protest answered, “Kisan ki loot ho gayi, bhai. (Farmers have been looted, brother).”

Satvir Singh from Bahadurgarh in Haryana. Credit: Kabir Agarwal/The Wire

The farmer introduced himself to us as Satvir Singh from Bahadurgarh in Haryana. He owns five acres of land and recently suffered heavy losses as unseasonal rains wrecked his mustard crop. “All of it was destroyed,” he said. “Didn’t you have crop insurance?” we asked him. Modi government’s flagship Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana is supposed to compensate farmers like Singh whose crops are damaged due to unseasonal rains or other such factors outside their control.

“Yes, I did,” Singh responded, his expression turning a little angry. “But the insurance companies refused to pay. They said that the whole village needed to have suffered damage due to the rains and that three or four farmers is not enough. Rs 2,500 was automatically deducted from my loan amount and I did not even get the benefit of crop insurance.”

“I had voted for the BJP in 2014 because I was fed up with the Congress. But, now I have no confidence in this government. They only know how to divide us and tell us who is a Hindu and who is a Muslim,” Singh added.

As the farmers continued to walk towards Sansad marg via Tolstoy road, a group of farmers from Macchra near Meerut in Uttar Pradesh fell behind. One of them has a knee injury and walks with a pronounced limp. “Aaj kuch roz se zyada dard hai pata nahi kyun. (Today, the pain is worse than every day for some reason),” he said, a little embarrassed to have held up everyone.

Each member of the group grows sugarcane, like most farmers in western UP. Everyone in the group has suffered due to delayed payments from sugarcane mills which have mounted to an all-time high of over Rs 12,000 crore in UP alone. Mule Singh, the man with the knee injury, has dues from the Nanglamal sugar mill of Rs 1.5 lakh. “The last payment I received was for February. I have not received payment for three months,” he said.

The group from Macchra that was forced to fall behind. Credit: Kabir Agarwal/The Wire

To address the woes of sugarcane farmers, the Centre had recently announced a Rs 7,000 crore package. We asked the farmers if that had helped. “Aji, kuch na. Saara paisa to millon ko de diya (No, nothing. The entire money has been given to sugar mills),” said Singh.

Harvir Singh, another sugarcane farmer from Macchra, expressed his displeasure with sugar mills. “They lie. They claim that they are making losses when they are earning a lot of profits from their other businesses like distilleries,” he said. “The raw material for that also is sugarcane, which is provided by us. Is it not?”

The march was halted by the police near Patel chowk, about a kilometre from parliament. There, a dais was set up and dhurries were rolled out for the farmers to sit.

Among the leaders gathered at the make shift stage were V.M. Singh, president of the Rashtriya Kisan Mazdoor Party; Yogendra Yadav, president of Swaraj India; Medha Patkar, convenor of the National Alliance of People’s Movement; Raju Shetty, MP and leader of the Swabhimani Shetkari Sanghatna in Maharashtra; Sharad Yadav, who recently launched the Loktantrik Janata Dal after breaking away from Nitish Kumar’s Janata Dal (United); Trilok Tyagi of the Rashtriya Lok Dal.

Swaraj India’s Yogendra Yadav and social activist Medha Patkar at the farmers protest against the hike in MSP of certain crops, in New Delhi, on July 20, 2018. CreditL PTI/Ravi Chaudhary

All the speakers accused Modi’s government of ‘duping farmers’ by claiming that the recent MSP hike is historic and in tune with what farmers had been demanding. “We voted Manmohan Singh out because he did not provide 50% over C2. We voted Modi in because he promised to provide that cost. He has duped the farmers of this country by going back on his promise. His MSP increase only gives 50% over the lower cost – A2FL,” said VM Singh.

Medha Patkar argued that minimum support price should be a legal right for farmers. “We want two things – profitable price and one time loan waiver. This MSP does not include the entire cost of production. The cost of land needs to be included and the MSP should be made a legal right for farmers,” she said.

“If you go to this government with a begging bowl, they will not listen. But, if you go with a stick, then they will drop to their knees. We need to strengthen this movement,” said Raju Shetty.

Farms from various states gathered to raise their slogans against the NDA government in New Delhi on July 20, 2018. Credit: PTI/Ravi Choudhary

Sharad Yadav advised farmers to vote on the issues of farmers and not get divided along communal and caste lines. “Choudhary Charan Singh created a new caste – that of farmers. Close to elections, we get divided along religious and caste lines. This should not happen. You have the power of the vote. Teach those a lesson who betray your trust,” he said.

Yogendra Yadav outlined several promises of the Modi government and how it had failed to live up to them. He then charted the future course of action of the AIKSCC – Kisan mukti bills to be introduced in parliament on August 3, and several protests in the next four months culminating with a ‘Mumbai-like march’ to Delhi on November 30.

“Today is just a trailer. The protests will only intensify. Today, we have passed our own no-confidence motion outside parliament, regardless of what happens inside. Now, we have to make them accountable,” Yadav said.