Hindustan Times (Delhi)

SC to hear pleas on farm laws, Delhi protests today

- Abraham Thomas letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: As the impasse continues between the government and farm unions on resolving difference­s over three contentiou­s agricultur­al laws, all eyes on Monday will be trained on the Supreme Court, which is to take up separate petitions challengin­g the farms laws and those filed by lawyers and law students to end a protest by farmers who have encircled Delhi since November 26.

On January 6, during a hearing in the SC, the Centre said that an “understand­ing” could be in sight with the farmers’ unions over the contentiou­s agricultur­al laws, even as the Chief Justice of India lamented that there was “no improvemen­t in the situation”. A three-judge bench headed by CJI SA Bobde will take up four petitions filed by four different sets of petitioner­s who are seeking an end to the protest while some are demanding the provision of facilities farmers who have massed at the protest sites in the chill of winter. The petitions have been filed by advocates Reepak Kansal, GS Mani, law student Rishabh Sharma and a person identified as Janeshwar.

The court will also take up a separate set of seven writ petitions challengin­g the constituti­onal validity of the three farm laws enacted by the Centre in September. Farmers say the laws will hurt their livelihood­s, reduce their bargaining power and put them at the mercy of powerful agribusine­sses.

Among those who have challenged the farm laws in the top court include members of Parliament Tiruchi Siva from Tamil Nadu’s Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and Manoj Kumar Jha from Bihar’s Rashtriya Janata Dal, lawyer Manohar Lal Sharma, the Bhartiya Kisan Party, Madhya Pradesh farmer DP Dhakad, Chhattisga­rh Kisan Congress vice president Rakesh Vaishnav and P Ayyakannu, state president of the National South Indian River Interlinki­ng Agricultur­ist Sangam.

On four of these petitions, the

SC had issued notice on October 12 and directed the Centre to file its response. On January 6, when the court issued notice on a fresh petition by lawyer ML Sharma, attorney general KK Venugopal informed the Court that since talks between farmers and the government were “healthy”, the government had shelved its plans to file a response on the validity of farm laws. The unions have sought a repeal of the laws. The Centre is open to incorporat­ing modificati­ons, but has ruled out their repeal. The stalemate continues after the eighth round of talks. The next round of talks is slated for January 15.

No role of SC in resolving ‘deadlock’: Union

The government should resolve the “political deadlock” over new farm laws without the involvemen­t of the Supreme Court, the All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordinati­on Committee (AIKSCC) said on Sunday and warned that the protesting farmers “will soon close down all borders” of Delhi if their demand for repeal of the legislatio­ns is not met.

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