Hindustan Times (Noida)

Space menu for Gaganyaan astronauts: biryani, korma

The Samyukt Kisan Morcha will hold a working committee meeting today to discuss ways to scale up the stir and reiterate their stand

- Zia Haq zia.haq@htlive.com

When India’s first manned space mission, Gaganyaan, lifts off next year, marking the beginning of a new era in India’s exploratio­n of space, the astronauts (or vyomanauts as India will call them) on board will carry a selection of special foods developed by a military laboratory which has been experiment­ing with ingredient­s for almost two years, people familiar with the developmen­t said. The menu prepared by Mysuru-based Defence Food Research Laboratory (DFRL) will offer the vyomanauts — hand-picked fighter pilots from the Indian Air Force — a variety of options to suit their palate during the seven-day mission: chicken biryani, chicken korma, shahi paneer, dal-chawal, aloo paratha, preserved chappatis, dal makhni, khichdi and beans in sauce. “American astronauts carry food that suits their taste. So do the Russians. We Indians like saying ‘it tastes just like home food.’ And home food is what our astronauts will carry,” said a DFRL scientist.

NEW DELHI: A day ahead of a crucial meeting of farm unions, leaders of the over two-monthlong protest against three farm laws said on Tuesday that direct talks with the government were the only way to end the agitation for which, they added, the government must end “the atmosphere of enmity” by lifting restrictio­ns on the Internet and restoring essential services, such as water and electricit­y, at protest sites.

The Samyukt Kisan Morcha, the platform of farm unions spearheadi­ng the protests, will hold its full working committee meeting on Wednesday, in which its leaders would discuss ways to scale up their campaign and reiterate their stand on being open to talks, said Darshan Pal, a key farm leader.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, speaking in Parliament on Monday, urged farmers to end their agitation and resume dialogue and assured them that a system of minimum floor prices for key crops would continue as usual. The farm unions, however, lashed out at the PM for calling supporters of the farmers’ agitation “andolan jeevi,” or protest parasites.

So far 11 rounds of talks between 40 farm leaders and the government have failed to resolve the crisis. Both the government and farmers had called off the series of discussion­s on January 22, citing lack of progress. The unions have

rejected the government’s offer to freeze the laws for 18 months, demanding their repeal.

“The Prime Minister has said the government is open to dialogue. We are open too. It is up to the government to follow up on what the prime minister said,” Pal told HT.

Tens of thousands of farmers, braving cold weather, have been camping in the open since November 26 on national highways leading to Delhi to demand the repeal of the three farm laws.

The government has said that the laws will bring investment­s and give farmers freedom to sell their produce directly to large buyers in a sector that accounts for nearly 15% of India’s $2.9 trillion economy and employs half its workforce. Farmers say the laws will threaten their livelihood­s by forcing them to sell to corporate giants instead of government-run markets.

Wednesday’s full meeting of the SKM will brainstorm on ways to scale up protests in multiple states. “We will organize many more mahapancha­yats (rural meetings). Farmers across the country are united and we

will continue to protest until the black laws are repealed,” said Rakesh Tikait, a farm leader who has organized several large rural rallies called mahapancha­yats in the past week, as part of the protests.

The farm unions, while emphasizin­g that they believed in talks even as the protests continue, blamed the government for creating a confrontat­ional atmosphere.

“Only direct talks with the government will end the agitation. But for the dialogue to resume, the government must end the atmosphere of enmity. The PM must show magnanimit­y and offer something new,” Hannan Mollah, another working committee member of the SKM, said.

He said the government must restore the internet at protest sites and resume essential facilities, such as water and electricit­y. “Such steps would help in restarting the dialogue.”

His views were echoed by Kavitha Kuruganti, who said while farmers were open to a resumption of talks, “attacks on farmers must stop”.

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 ?? SAKIB ALI /HT PHOTO ?? Farmers at protest site in Ghazipur on Tuesday.
SAKIB ALI /HT PHOTO Farmers at protest site in Ghazipur on Tuesday.

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