Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Police cut off Singhu border from Capital

- Karn Pratap Singh karn.singh@hindustant­imes.com

With increased deployment of security personnel, four-layered barricadin­g on the main highway connecting Delhi with Haryana, and trenches dug up on the adjacent roads, the Singhu border protest site’s connectivi­ty with the Capital remained snapped throughout Sunday, leading to disruption­s in supplies and movement of people.

As internet services remained suspended in and around the Singhu border protest venue – thousands are agitating against three contentiou­s farm laws at the site – for the third consecutiv­e day, farmers alleged that the step was taken to stop their voices from reaching the rest of the world.

“It (the government) wants to spread its false spin around farmers. It is also fearful of the coordinate­d work of the farmers’ unions across different protest sites and is trying to cut off communicat­ion means between them. This is undemocrat­ic and illegal,” Samyukta Kisan Morcha (SKM), the umbrella body of 40 farmers unions that are part of the agitation against the three contentiou­s farm laws, said in a statement on Sunday.

As per the government’s order, internet services at three borders points – Singhu, Tikri and Ghazipur – were suspended from January 29 till 11pm on Sunday. The police denied allegation­s that the Singhu area was completely cut off, saying that movement and supplies of essential items continued through alternativ­e routes.

“As the police have blocked all the roads and sub-lanes and

not allowing us to cross over, we have not been able to use the portable toilets or the water tankers arranged by the Delhi government since yesterday (Saturday). We are now completely dependent on the toilets and water supplies of local residents,” said Dilbagh Singh, a farmer from Punjab’s Sangrur, who has been running a langar at the border point,

close to the police’s barricades.

Questionin­g the cordoning off of the protest sites, the SKM said it was being done to disrupt basic supplies such as food and water. “All these various attacks of the government are recognised by us as such, and we condemn the same,” read the SKM’s statement.

NEW DELHI: At 12.10pm on Tuesday, when Archaeolog­ical Survey of India (ASI) officials and CISF personnel were receiving the tableaux coming from the Republic Day Parade, the first group of about 200 protesters and 25 tractors tried to push their way into the Red Fort through the Lahori Gate, according to the first informatio­n report (FIR) filed by the ASI on Saturday in connection with the vandalism at the monument on January 26.

On Tuesday, several groups among thousands of farmers who were camping at Delhi’s border demanding withdrawal of three new farm laws, arrived at the Red Fort without warning and in violation of the terms of their tractor rally, and clashed with police. They also allegedly inflicted extensive damage at the monument. Union tourism and culture minister Prahlad Singh Patel visited the fort on Wednesday along with the ASI director general and directed registrati­on of an FIR.

HT has seen the FIR filed by the Superinten­ding Archaeolog­ist of India. The FIR has been transferre­d to the crime branch for investigat­ion. This was the second case filed in the incident at Red Fort, the first one was filed by the police.

The FIR details the siege by the protesters, damage to the property and the response by the security forces at the Unesco World Heritage Site.

According to the FIR, between 12.10pm and 1.10pm, about 300 protesters and 25 tractors tried to enter the fort thrice through the Lahori Gate but teams of Delhi police and CISF neutralise­d them by locking the gate.

Around 1 pm, large groups of protesters on motorcycle­s and tractors started coming to Red Fort from the Subhash Marg. “…They then joined the mob gathered there and forced open the gate. The security personnel were completely outnumbere­d,” the FIR read, adding that the mob then damaged the ticket counter, door metal frame detector, and the baggage scanners. The ASI said the mob then turned towards Lahori gate entrance, which had been “firmly secured with an iron chain and lock”. “The mob climbed over this iron door, jumped inside, and broke the chain lock with the help of iron tools.. security personnel could not resist the mob,” it said.

 ?? PTI ?? An earthmover seen at the Singhu border on Sunday.
PTI An earthmover seen at the Singhu border on Sunday.

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