San Antonio Express-News

Indian farmers rise up against Modi, laws

- By Sheikh Saaliq

NEW DELHI — A chilly breeze whirls through New Delhi in the mornings and the sun is partly obscured by toxic haze, a marker of another winter in the Indian capital. But along the city’s borders, this year is visibly and viscerally different.

The perpetuall­y busy arterial highways that connect most northern Indian towns to this city of 29 million people now pulse to the cries of “Inquilab Zindabad” — “Long live the revolution.” Tens and thousands of farmers with distinctiv­e, colorful turbans and long, flowing beards have descended upon the city’s borders, choking highways in giant demonstrat­ions against new farming laws that they say will open them to corporate exploitati­on.

For more than a week, they’ve marched toward the capital on their tractors and trucks like an army, pushing aside concrete police barricades while braving tear gas, batons and water cannons. Now, on the outskirts of New Delhi, they are hunkered down with food and fuel supplies that can last weeks and threatenin­g to besiege the capital if Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government doesn’t meet their demands to abolish the laws.

“Modi wants to sell our lands to corporates,” said one of them, Kaljeet Singh, 31, who traveled from Ludhiana city in Punjab, about 190 miles north of New Delhi. “He can’t decide for millions of those who for generation­s have given their blood and sweat to the land they regard as more precious than their lives.”

At night, the farmers sleep in trailers and under trucks, curling themselves in blankets to brave the winter chill. During the day, they sit huddled in groups in their vehicles, surrounded by mounds of rice, lentils and vegetables that are prepared into meals at hundreds of makeshift soup kitchens, in enormous pots stirred with wooden spoons the size of canoe paddles.

Anmol Singh, 33, who supports his family of six by farming, said the new laws were part of a larger plan to hand over the farmers’ land to big corporatio­ns and make them landless.

“Modi wants the poor farmer to die of hunger so that he can fill the stomachs of his rich friends,” he said. “We are here to fight his brutal decrees peacefully.”

He paused, then reconsider­ed: “Actually, let him and his ministers take us on. We will give them a bloody nose.”

Many of the protesting farmers hail from northern Punjab and Haryana, two of the largest agricultur­al states in India. An overwhelmi­ng majority of them are Sikhs. They fear the laws passed in September will lead the government to stop buying grain at minimum guaranteed prices and result in exploitati­on by corporatio­ns who will push down prices. Many activists and farming experts support their demand for a minimum guaranteed price for their crops.

The new rules will also eliminate agents who act as middlemen between the farmers and the government-regulated wholesale markets. Farmers say agents are a vital cog of the farm economy and their main line of credit, providing quick funds for fuel, fertilizer­s and even loans in case of family emergencie­s.

The laws have compounded existing resentment from farmers, who often complain of being ignored by the government in their push for better crop prices, additional loan waivers and irrigation systems to guarantee water during dry spells.

The government has argued the laws bring about necessary reform that will allow farmers to market

their produce and boost production through private investment. But farmers say they were never consulted.

With nearly 60 percent of the Indian population depending on agricultur­e for their livelihood­s, the growing farmer rebellion has rattled Modi’s administra­tion and allies. His leaders have scrambled to contain the protests, which are fast resembling last year’s scenes when a contentiou­s new citizenshi­p law that discrimina­ted against Muslims led to demonstrat­ions that culminated in violence.

Those demonstrat­ions were much bigger in scale, but the farmers’ rumblings are growing fast and gaining widespread support of ordinary citizens who have started joining them in large numbers.

Modi and his allies have tried to allay farmers’ fears about the new laws while

dismissing their concerns. Some of his party leaders have called the farmers “misguided” and “anti-national,” a label often given to those who criticize Modi or his policies.

The government is holding talks with the farmers to persuade them to end their protests, but they have dug in their heels.

On Friday, a group of 35 leaders of the farmers called for a nationwide shutdown on Tuesday and said the protests would continue until the laws are revoked.

Farmer Kulwant Singh, 72, said that when he left his home in Haryana for the protests, he gave his wife a garland of flowers for two possible scenarios.

“Either I return victorious and she places it around my neck in celebratio­n, or I die here revolting and the same garland is put on my body when it reaches home,” Singh said.

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 ?? Photos by Altaf Qadri / Associated Press ?? Above, demonstrat­ors make placards for a protest Tuesday at the Delhi-Haryana state border of India. At left, farmers shout slogans as they protest new laws they say will result in exploitati­on by corporatio­ns, eventually rendering them landless.
Photos by Altaf Qadri / Associated Press Above, demonstrat­ors make placards for a protest Tuesday at the Delhi-Haryana state border of India. At left, farmers shout slogans as they protest new laws they say will result in exploitati­on by corporatio­ns, eventually rendering them landless.

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