Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

SKM forms panel to talk with Centre on pending demands

- Zia Haq

NEW DELHI: The Samyukta Kisan Morcha (SKM) on Saturday formed a five-member panel for talks with the government on their pending demands, even as the group, which was spearheadi­ng the protest against the now repealed farm laws, announced it will continue its agitation until all demands are met.

On November 29, the Centre repealed the three agricultur­al laws farmers had been protesting against for over a year.

With the latest move, crucial talks between the Union government and protesting farm unions could resume in a few weeks after nearly a year of pause. “Talks are possible soon but it all depends on when the government sends its invitation,” Hannan Mollah, who is on the SKM’S committee for presumptiv­e negotiatio­ns, said.

Farmer leaders Balbir Singh Rajewal, Ashok Dhawle, Shiv Kumar Kakka, Gurnam Singh Chaduni and Yudhvir Singh were named as members of the committee after a meeting was held by the SKM. The SKM panel will focus on pending demands including on minimum support price, compensati­on to the kin of farmers who died during the movement against the farm laws and withdrawal of cases against the protesters, farmer leader Rakesh Tikait said.

He said the next meeting of the morcha will take place on December 7 to decide the future course of the movement. The SKM has decided they will not move from the Delhi border protest site until all their demands are met.

The Union government is indirectly talking to some farm leaders to prepare the ground for a dialogue over a slew of remaining demands by cultivator­s, according to a person aware of the matter.

Mollah said the farmers’ platform set up the five-member panel after a request by the Centre to keep the team of negotiator­s small. He said Union home minister Amit Shah held telephonic conversati­ons with Balbir Singh Rajewal and Yudhvir Singh. “This is not good enough. We need a formal dialogue to start soon,” he said.

Dhawle said the issues of compensati­on to be given for the farmers who died, “false cases” lodged against farmers and the Lakhimpur Kheri incident were discussed at the meeting on Saturday.

The Centre hasn’t announced a date for the two sides to get back on the table and the SKM said it will respond only when an official invitation is extended to the farmers by the Centre.

After 11 rounds of talks, the Centre withdrew from the dialogue process on January 22 this year after a deadlock. At the time, the government viewed as sweeping calls by farm unions to scrap the laws. Prime Minister Narendra Modi on November 19 said his government would abandon the legislatio­n at the heart of massive protests by tens of thousands of farmers. The farmers said the government would have to cancel all criminal cases registered against protesting farmers in various states, especially Haryana, a major arena of the farm protests.

In separate talks with Haryana chief minister Manohar Lal Khattar on Friday by a team of farm leaders that included Gurnam Singh Chaduni and Inderjit Singh, the Haryana government for the first time acknowledg­ed that it was prepared to take back cases.

“The Haryana chief minister said cases would be withdrawn but he did not even in principle accept our demand that families of martyred farmers be compensate­d monetarily,” Inderjit said.

The two sides — the Haryana government and the farm leaders led by Chaduni — could not agree on the number of cases to be withdrawn. Farm unions say 45,000 protesting farmers had been named as accused in various police complaints, while the government put the figure at 32,000.

“(The) Samyukt Kisan Morcha held a crucial meeting today to discuss about pending demands of the farmers’ movement and the lack of a formal response from the Government of India. It was decided unanimousl­y that the farmers’ agitation will continue as is, until formal and satisfacto­ry responses are obtained from the Government of India,” the SKM said in a release.

Bringing a law to guarantee minimum prices for farm produce is a top pending demand. Besides, farm unions also want the cancelling of the Electricit­y Amendment Bill 2020/2021, which proposes to replace subsidised agricultur­al power with direct cash benefits.

The SKM also wants a section of a law on pollution in the National Capital Region deleted. The section empowers authoritie­s to fine farmers for burning crop residue.

They also want a parcel of land for a memorial for 702 farmers who have died during their yearlong protests and their families rehabilita­ted with compensati­on.

 ?? ?? Rakesh Tikait
Rakesh Tikait

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