Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Stubble burning: 196 Punjab farmers held, 327 FIRs lodged

- HT Correspond­ents letterschd@hindustant­imes.com ■

BATHINDA/LUDHIANA/PATIALA: A day after the Supreme Court rap for failing to put a stop to stubble burning, the Punjab government on Tuesday arrested at least 196 farmers for violating the ban and registered 327 first informatio­n reports (FIRs) even as 6,668 farm fires – the highest in a single day this season – were reported from across the state.

The farmers were arrested under section 188 (disobeying the order duly promulgate­d by a public servant) of the Indian Penal Code, a bailable offence, as they flouted the ban orders issued by the district authoritie­s. The bulk of the arrests were made in Malwa region which is primarily responsibl­e for the spurt in farm fires in the past three days.

Of the 101 farmers arrested in south Malwa, 74 farmers were in Moga followed by 14 in Mansa, eight in Muktsar and five in Bathinda. In addition, 167 FIRs were also lodged against farmers in seven districts in the region. In Ludhiana, 49 FIRs were registered and 22 farmers arrested for setting the paddy residue on fire. In Tarn Taran district, 36 farmers were arrested.

Similarly, the Fatehgarh

Sahib police arrested 37 farmers and registered 47 FIRS against erring farmers. Red entries were also made in the revenue record of at least 850 farmers, 704 of them in Sangrur alone, so that to deprive them of benefits under the government welfare schemes. While the Centre had specifical­ly identified Patiala, Sangrur, Bathinda and Tarn Taran districts for continued stubble burning, the state machinery intensifie­d action after the Supreme Court direction to immediatel­y put an end to farm fires.

However, the government crackdown had little impact on farmers who remained defiant as 6,668 stubble burning incidents were reported on Tuesday. The total count of farm fires has shot up to 37,935 whereas 27,224 cases of stubble burning were reported till November 5 last year. The number of active fires recorded this year is even higher than 37,298 stubble burning cases during the correspond­ing period of 2017.

On Monday, Punjab had reported 5,953 farm fires. The spike in stubble burning had prompted the Supreme Court to summon chief secretarie­s of Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh. Anil Sood, senior scientist at the Punjab Remote Sensing Centre, PAU, said most of the paddy straw burning incidents have been reported from Sangrur, Ferozepur, Mansa, Moga and Bathinda. The arrests and punitive action have upset the farmers’ unions. In Muktsar, farmers took out a march under the banner of the BKU (Ugrahan) and burn paddy stubble to register their protest. They have also announced gherao of district officials.

MUKTSAR : Upset over punitive action including FIRs, challans and red entries, farmers under the banner of Bharti Kisan Union (Ugrahan) on Tuesday burnt paddy stubble as protest in Doda village in Gidderbaha sub division of the district. The farmer outfit also held a protest march in several villages.

Addressing farmers, general secretary Muktsar BKU, Ghurbhagat Singh said, “Farmers are already facing economic crisis. There is a dip in yield of paddy crop, too. Farmers have no option but to burn paddy residue due to the economical burden of residual management. We will also gherao officials who visit villages and intensify our struggle.”

Administra­tive officials, including deputy commission­er MK Aravind, visited several villages in the district and instructed farmers to not burn stubble as it not only harms soil health but also pollutes environmen­t leading to disastrous consequenc­es on human health.

“Police action against farmers is unjust. Rather than lodging cases, the government should lend a helping hand to farmers to tackle the issue by providing them bonus,” said Pooran Singh, district president of the union.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India