Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Punjab, the land of agitations, saw 32 protests a day last yr

State 3rd in country, behind Uttarakhan­d and Tamil Nadu, in number of protests; these states saw almost double the protests

- Navneet Sharma navneetsha­rma@hindustant­imes.com

Punjab is now in a state of despair due to corruption, selective patronage for political or electoral gains ... and the decline of farm sector. PROF ASHUTOSH KUMAR, political scientist from Panjab University

: The Captain Amarinder Singh-led Congress government took over just five-anda-half months ago, but is already facing protests from different quarters. The opposition parties, farmers, teachers, jobless youth and others, all have hit the streets in the past few weeks to press the government to meet their demands.

Welcome to the land of agitations. Punjab witnessed 11,876 protests – 32 a day – in 2016.

The number of agitations put Punjab among the three most protest-hit states in the country behind Uttarakhan­d and Tamil Nadu with 21,996 and 20,450 protests last year, according to data collated by the Bureau of Police Research and Developmen­t (BPR&D) under the Union ministry of home affairs from police department­s of all states.

BPR&D data shows that the government employees in Punjab were the most disgruntle­d and held 5,751 dharnas (sit-ins), demonstrat­ions

or protest marches during the final year of the previous Shiromani Akali Dal-Bharatiya Janata Party (SAD-BJP) government in the state.

While political parties were active and organised 2,708 protests in the run-up to the state assembly polls held in February this year, there were also a string of protests by the farmers’ organisati­ons against the rising number of farmer suicides in the state as well as to demand debt waiver and remunerati­ve prices for agricultur­e produce.

Professor Ashutosh Kumar, a

political scientist from Panjab University, attributes the agitations to a long tradition of movements in the state, but it is no longer about ideology, as the protests are primarily against lack of governance, institutio­nal decline and politicisa­tion of the state.

“Once counted among the bestgovern­ed states in the country, Punjab is now in a state of despair due to corruption, selective patronage for political or electoral gains, gross mismanagem­ent, crony capitalism and the decline of agricultur­e sector, the mainstay of the state’s economy,” he adds, listing the reasons for public disaffecti­on.

While the BPR&D report does not give break-up of agitations for districts, Bathinda, the home turf of the Badal family which ruled the state for 10 years from 2007 to 2017, was the protest capital.

A police officer said these daily protests were a huge problem. “They put tremendous burden on police personnel, keeping them occupied in routine law and order duties. The saving grace is that most protests are largely peaceful,” he said, requesting anonymity.

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