Chattanooga Times Free Press

Bowing to protests, India’s Modi agrees to repeal farm laws

- BY SHEIKH SAALIQ

NEW DELHI — In a major reversal, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced Friday that he would repeal the controvers­ial agricultur­e laws that sparked yearlong protests from tens of thousands of farmers and posed a significan­t challenge to his administra­tion.

Farmers, who form one of India’s most influentia­l voting blocs, have camped out on the outskirts of the capital since November of last year to demand the withdrawal of the laws, which they feared would dramatical­ly reduce their incomes.

Modi’s surprise decision, in a televised national address, came ahead of elections early next year in key states like Uttar Pradesh and Punjab that are significan­t agricultur­al producers and where his Bharatiya Janata Party is eager to shore up its support. Experts said it was too early to say if it would work.

The prime minister urged the protesters to return home, but the farmers have said they will stay put until the laws are gone — a process that will begin in December when Parliament sits for its winter session.

“While apologizin­g to the nation, I want to say with a sincere and pure heart that maybe something was lacking in our efforts that we could not explain the truth to some of our farmer brothers,” Modi said during the address. He added: “Let us make a fresh start.”

The move represente­d a rare climbdown for the 71-year-old leader, who has stood firm in the face of fierce criticism over other steps his government took, such as abruptly banning high-denominati­on currency notes and revoking Muslim majority Kashmir’s semiautono­mous powers.

He also backed a citizenshi­p law that excludes Muslim immigrants, even in the face of sometimes violent protests.

But farmers are a particular­ly influentia­l voting bloc in India — both for their sheer numbers but also because and they are often romanticiz­ed as the heart and soul of the nation. They are especially important to Modi’s base and make up substantia­l portions of the population in some states his party rules.

“Modi projects himself as a bold, determined leader who doesn’t back down. And yet he’s done just that, to a farmer’s movement that his government had maligned for months,” said Michael Kugelman of the Asia Program at the Washington-based Wilson Center.

Modi had long defended the laws, which were passed in September last year, as necessary to modernize India’s agricultur­al sector. But farmers feared they would end a system under which the government guaranteed prices for certain essential crops.

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