San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Jubilant farmers head home after yearlong protest

- By Rishi Lekhi Rishi Lekhi is an Associated Press writer.

NEW DELHI — Tens of thousands of triumphant Indian farmers on Saturday cleared protest sites on the capital’s outskirts and began returning home, marking an end to their yearlong demonstrat­ions against agricultur­al reforms that were repealed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government in a rare retreat.

Farmers dismantled their makeshift accommodat­ions at multiple protest sites and started to vacate long stretches of highways ringing New Delhi where they have camped since November last year. Hundreds of them waved green and white flags and danced to celebrate their victory as they rode tractors, jeeps and cars.

“Farmers have saved the democracy. It was a fight for justice,” said farmer Nagendra Singh.

After a year of insisting that the new measures would benefit farmers, Modi made a surprise announceme­nt to withdraw them last month. A bill to repeal the laws was officially passed in Parliament on Nov. 30. But the farmers did not immediatel­y vacate the protest sites and said they would continue to demonstrat­e until the government agreed to other demands, including guaranteed prices for key crops and the withdrawal of criminal cases against protesters.

On Thursday, the government set up a committee to consider those demands.

Modi’s government had insisted that the laws were necessary reforms to modernize Indian farming and would lead to a deregulate­d market with more private-sector control

Farmers celebrate as they vacate a protest site on the outskirts of New Delhi. Tens of thousands of protesting farmers forced the government to repeal laws seen as a threat to their livelihood­s.

of agricultur­e. The farmers said the laws would drasticall­y shrink their incomes and leave them at the mercy of big corporatio­ns. In protest, they pressed for the complete repeal of the laws.

Currently, an overwhelmi­ng majority of farmers sell only to government-sanctioned marketplac­es at fixed prices.

Farmers form one of India’s most influentia­l voting blocs

and Modi’s decision to scrap the laws came ahead of elections early next year in key states like Uttar Pradesh and Punjab, both significan­t agricultur­al producers and where his Bharatiya Janata Party is eager to shore up its support.

Political analysts say the upcoming elections are a major reason behind the surprise move, but that it’s too early to say whether it will work.

“Modi apologized to farmers but only after resorting to dictatorsh­ip. We were called terrorists,” said Jaigran, a farmer who uses just one name.

The protests were the biggest challenge Modi’s government faced since coming to power in 2014.

 ?? Altaf Qadri / Associated Press ??
Altaf Qadri / Associated Press

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