Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Agri reforms India’s domestic issue: Leader of UK Parliament

- Press Trust of India letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

LONDON:: Agricultur­e reform is a domestic policy issue of India, the Leader of the House of Commons said in Parliament, reflecting the UK government’s stance over the farmer protests in New Delhi.

Jacob Rees-mogg, in response to demands for a debate over the issue in the chamber from Opposition Labour MPS on Thursday, acknowledg­ed that the issue is a “matter of concern” for the Commons and across constituen­cies in the UK and that Britain will continue to champion human rights globally, including through its current chairmansh­ip of the United Nations.

“India is a proud democracy with which we have the strongest possible relations. I happen to think that over the next century, our relationsh­ip with India may well be our most important relationsh­ip with any country in the world,” said Rees-mogg, a senior Conservati­ve Party member of Parliament who serves as the party’s Leader in the House of Commons, the lower house of Parliament.

“As India is our friend, it is only right that we make representa­tions when we think that things are happening that are not in the interests of the reputation of the country of which we are a friend,” he said, adding that UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab has raised the matter with External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar during his India visit in December last year.

“The UK will continue to follow the farmers’ protest closely. Agricultur­al reform is a domestic policy issue for India. We will continue to champion human rights globally, and having the chairmansh­ip of the UN Security Council this month is a part of that,” Rees-mogg noted.

The leader was responding during a regular Business of the House sitting as MPS debated matters to be addressed in upcoming Parliament sessions.

Labour’s shadow Leader of the House, Valerie Vaz, had raised the issue of the farmers’ protests being considered for a backbench debate by the Petitions Committee after an e-petition on the official parliament­ary website crossed the required threshold of 100,000 earlier this month.

“Satyagraha is the Gandhian peaceful protest that is in the Indian DNA, but we have seen scenes of terrible violence against those who are protecting their livelihood­s. I have had no response to my letter to the Foreign Secretary (Raab) yet,” said Vaz, a Goan-origin MP.

Fellow Labour MP Tanmanjit Singh Dhesi also pushed for a debate over “the largest protest on the planet”, in the main Commons chamber itself. “Given our serious anxieties, more than 100 honourable members signed a letter to the Prime Minister (Boris Johnson) seeking his interventi­on,” said Dhesi, the first turbaned Sikh MP in the Commons.

 ??  ?? Jacob Rees-mogg
Jacob Rees-mogg

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