China Daily

Thousands of Indian farmers protest in New Delhi

-

NEW DELHI — Thousands of farmers protested in India’s capital on Thursday to press their demand for a new law that would guarantee minimum crop prices, after weeks of being blocked from entering the city.

They rode crowded buses and trains instead of their tractors to New Delhi, after authoritie­s barricaded highways into the capital with concrete blocks and barbed wire. Police also banned the use of farm vehicles as a condition for granting permission for the rally in the city. Participan­ts were also barred from carrying sticks or swords to avoid clashes with police.

Protesters held placards demanding free electricit­y for farming. They contended that without minimum price guarantees for their crops, they would be at the mercy of the markets and that would spell disaster, especially for the more than two-thirds of them who own less than 1 hectare of land.

The rally, organized by the United Farmers Front, was held at Ramlila Ground, which is used for religious festivals, major political meetings and entertainm­ent events.

Police also set a condition for the rally that no more than 5,000 people would participat­e, the Press Trust of India news agency said. The rally was scheduled to end later on Thursday.

Chitwant Singh, a protester, said farmers did not earn enough to cover their costs. “The traders and middlemen take away all our profits,” he said.

The protest comes at a crucial time for India, which has a national election in April and May, in which Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s governing party is widely expected to secure a third successive term. Farmers are a particular­ly influentia­l voting bloc because of their numbers. More than 60 percent of India’s 1.4 billion people depend on farming for their livelihood­s.

The farmers are also pressing the government to keep its promises to waive loans and withdraw legal cases brought against them during earlier protests in 2021. Several rounds of talks have failed to break the deadlock.

Separately, thousands of farmers have been protesting in Shambhu, a town about 200 kilometers from the capital, since Feb 13.

The farmers have brought bulldozers and excavators to try and push through the concrete blocks and barbed wire barricades that the authoritie­s had erected to prevent the farmers from entering the capital.

On Feb 21, clashes between farmers and police left one protester dead as the farmers tried to resume their march to the capital after talks with the government failed to end an impasse over their demands for guaranteed crop prices.

Police said 12 officers were injured after protesters attacked them with sticks and pelted them with stones.

Two years ago, tens of thousands of farmers camped out on the outskirts of New Delhi for months, forcing Modi to repeal new agricultur­e laws in a major reversal for his government.

Protest organizers said the farmers are seeking a law that would guarantee minimum prices for 23 crops to help stabilize their incomes.

The government protects agricultur­al producers against sharp falls in farm prices by setting a minimum purchase price for certain essential crops, a system that was introduced in the 1960s to help shore up food reserves and prevent shortages. The system can apply to up to 23 crops, but the government usually offers the minimum price only for rice and wheat.

 ?? ADNAN ABIDI / REUTERS ?? A farmer holds a mock plow as he attends a protest in New Delhi on Thursday to press for better crop prices promised to them in 2021.
ADNAN ABIDI / REUTERS A farmer holds a mock plow as he attends a protest in New Delhi on Thursday to press for better crop prices promised to them in 2021.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong