Farm Bills need of 21st century: PM
New Delhi, Sept. 21: Prime Minister Narendra Modi asserted on Monday that the farm sector reform bills passed by Parliament were the need of 21st century India and again reassured farmers that the government purchase of their produce coupled with the minimum support price mechanism will continue.
With Opposition parties vehemently criticising the legislations as “antifarmers” and protests continuing in states like Punjab and Haryana, Modi again mounted a strong defence of these measures, saying farmers will now have the freedom to sell their produce at a place and price of their choice. Attacking critics, he said a “clique” of people exploited farmers for long as they remained in shackles of rules regulating the sale of their produce and stated that this needed to change, which his government has done.
“After these historical changes in the agricultural sector, some people are losing their control of it. So now these people are trying to mislead farmers on MSP (minimum support price). They are the same people who sat for years on the recommendations of the Swaminathan committee on MSP,” Modi said, in an apparent swipe at the Congress.
Describing the legislations as “very historic”, the Prime Minister said if somebody says that government-regulated agriculture markets will be finished after these reforms, then he is “blatantly lying”.
Modi made the comments at a virtual ceremony to lay foundation stones of nine highway projects in Bihar.