Deutsche Welle (English edition)

India farmer protesters clash with police on Republic Day

Tens of thousands of Indian farmers protesting agricultur­al reforms have driven a convoy of tractors into New Delhi as the capital celebrates Republic Day with a military parade.

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Protesting farmers descended on India's capital Tuesday, driving in long lines of tractors, riding horses or marching on foot, to demonstrat­e against agricultur­al reforms proposed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government.

New Delhi police fired tear gas at the protesting farmers after they broke through barricades and stormed the historic Red Fort, waving farm union flags from the fort's ramparts.

The protesters were able to use India's national Republic Day, and storming the fort, as a symbolic challenge to Modi's government.

A military parade in the capital, which celebrates the adoption of the Indian constituti­on in 1950, was also overshadow­ed by the vast tractor rally.

DW's India correspond­ent Nimisha Jaiswal shared a video on Twitter of jubilant farmers after they broke through police lines, saying: "After tear gas and baton charges, farmers are exuberant as tractors, horses and crowds

overrun the roads, and security forces leave the scene."

The protesters used cranes and ropes to pull down road blocks far from their approved marching route, forcing riot police to fall back, witnesses told Reuters.

A statement from the group of farmers unions explained that only one of the several protest parades had deviated from its pre-arranged route.

"Except for one group...our news is that all parades are happening on the pre-decided routes along with police," they said.

Why are farmers in India protesting?

For over two months, Indian farmers have been protesting new agricultur­al laws, which they say benefit large, private agricultur­al companies over small local producers.

On January 13, India's Supreme Court suspended the implementa­tion of the laws to give time for farmers' unions and the government to work on a solution.

A series of talks have fallen flat, and the farmers' unions have maintained that they want the laws rolled back — a demand firmly rejected by the government which has instead offered to amend the laws.

"We want to show Modi our strength,'' Satpal Singh, a farmer who marched into the capital on a tractor along with his family of five, told AP.

"We will not surrender," he said.

Agricultur­al jobs make up nearly half of India's workforce, and the on-going protests represent one the biggest challenges to Modi's government to date.

"Modi will hear us now, he will have to hear us now," said Sukhdev Singh, a farmer from the agricultur­ally important northern state of Punjab, as he marched past the barricades.

Indian farmers in dire straits

More than half of India's farmers are in debt and more than 20,000 committed suicide in 2018 and 2019, according to official statistics.

The massive size of the workforce, combined with the fact that agricultur­e only comprises around15% of India's GDP means farmers are finding it harder to make a living.

Devinder Sharma, an agricultur­e expert who campaigns for income equality for Indian farmers, said the protests were not just aimed at reforming the new law, but at "challengin­g the entire economic design of the country.''

"The anger that you see is compounded anger,'' Sharma said. "Inequality is growing in India and farmers are becoming poorer. Policy planners have failed to realize this and have sucked the income from the bottom to the top. The farmers are only demanding what is their right."

 ??  ?? Protesters pull roadblocks on chains
Protesters pull roadblocks on chains

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