Hindustan Times (Patiala)

TN CM announces farm loan waivers

- Ravinder Vasudeva ravinder.vasudeva@htive.com

Tamil Nadu chief minister Edappadi Palaniswam­i on Friday announced, months ahead of assembly elections in the state, farm loan waivers worth ₹12,110 crore that are aimed at benefittin­g nearly 1.6 million farmers. “I am also a farmer, I have a lot of affection for farmers. It is my responsibi­lity to help farmers to continue their work,” the chief minister said on the last day of the assembly session, adding that the farm loan waiver scheme will come into effect with immediate effect to reduce the burden on debtridden farmers reeling from the Covid-19 pandemic, two cyclones, and a heavy monsoon. The decision has come in the backdrop of massive protests across the country against the Centre’s three new farm laws. The All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, which is in alliance the Centre’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party for the upcoming assembly elections in Tamil Nadu, has supported the three laws.

CHANDIGARH: The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has fielded candidates from majority of the seats in nearly all major municipali­ties, including eight corporatio­ns, for the forthcomin­g civic body elections in Punjab despite an unpreceden­ted backlash from the farmers protesting against the Centre’s three contentiou­s agricultur­e laws.

Of a total of 401 wards in the eight municipal corporatio­ns of Mohali, Bathinda, Hoshiarpur, Pathankot, Batala, Moga, Kapurthala and Abohar that are going to the polls, the saffron party has fielded candidates from as many as 351 seats.

The party fielded nominees on all 50 seats in its traditiona­l stronghold­s of Pathankot, Abohar and Hoshiarpur corporatio­ns. In the corporatio­ns where its erstwhile alliance partner Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) dominated the poll scene, the party has fielded 43 each in Batala and Bathinda, 30 in Moga, 37 in Kapurthala, and 49 in Mohali. All these civic bodies have 50 wards each.

The BJP had contested 19, 14 and 15 seats in Bathinda, Mohali and Moga, respective­ly, in the last election.

In its other traditiona­l stronghold­s of Sujanpur, Dinanagar, Dasua and Mukerian, Rajpura, and Nangal, the party has managed to field candidates from all wards. In other towns where the party has made its presence felt are Zirakpur (28 of 31 seats), Kharar (all 27 seats), Ajnala (all 15 seats), Barnala (14 of 31 seats), Dera Bassi (15 of 19 seats), Fatehgarh Churian (8 of 13 seats), Fazilka (23 of 25 seats), Sirhind (15 of 23 seats), Ferozepur (24 of 33 seats), Gurdaspur (28 of 29 seats), Jalalabad (13 of 17 seats), Khanna (33 of 31 seats), Muktsar (22 of 31 seats), Nabha (22 of 23 seats), Nawanshahr (19 of 19 seats) and Sunam (17 of 23 seats). Not only this, the party candidates are in the fray in many prominent urban bodies of the Malwa region which has emerged as the epicentre of the farmers’ protests.

“We are trying to make inroads in areas where the party had no traditiona­l base. We are contesting on all maximum seats in Malout (21), Muktsar (21) and Gidderbaha (9). Elections are being held on party symbol,” said party’s state general secretary Subhash Sharma.

4 Muslim candidates withdraw at last minute in Malerkotla

In Punjab’s only Muslim-dominated town of Malerkotla, the party’s six candidates from the community filed their nomination­s against a total of 15 seats. However, four of the candidates withdrew their nomination at the last minute due to pressure from leaders of other parties, said Sangrur district BJP chief Randeep Deol, a young-Sikh face of the party.

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