The Free Press Journal

Tikait seeks to rally Raj farmers against 3 contentiou­s farm laws

- FPJ CORRESPOND­ENT Jaipur

Farmer leader Rakesh Tikait is these days holding meetings with farmers to whip up support on the ground against the three contentiou­s central farm laws.

Tikait, of the Bharatiya Kisan Union, has 5 rallies planned in Rajasthan in this month. Through the farmers’ meetings he is also trying to build up his own political base. He has held meetings in Karauli, Sawai Madhopur and Jhunjhunu districts in February. On Wednesday, he addressed a rally in Nagaur, the constituen­cy of Rashtriya Loktantrik Party convener Hanuman Beniwal.

On March 12, he will hold a kisan mahapancha­yat in Pipad city in Jodhpur district, on March 17 a meeting will be held in Srigangana­gar and a big rally is planned in Jaipur on March 23.

The meetings are being held in areas which are stronghold­s of farmers as well as Jats, the community to which Tikait belongs.

At a meeting in Nagaur on Wednesday, Tikait asked farmers to learn to break barricades so they can take their agitation to Delhi.

Addressing the large gathering, he asked farmers to be ready for a long haul. “Farmers will have to continue the agitation. We have to make committees in each village. Only then will this agitation be successful.”

“If the administra­tion imposes Section 144, farmer organisati­ons put Section 188 alongside. Till you don’t learn to break barricadin­g and push your way forward, you can’t take the agitation to Delhi. If you come to know there is barricadin­g anywhere in the city, farmers should have 4 times the strength and learn to break the barricadin­g,” he said.

Tikait said tractors are the tanks of the farmers. Giving a formula for a successful organisati­on, he said, “One village, 15 men and 10 days is the formula of building an organisati­on. After 10 days, change 15 the people.”

He said the 3 farm laws that have been made in Delhi are being brought in to destroy the farmers. “If farmers lose, labourers also lose. Bhimrao Ambedkar and the constituti­on will lose. Rotis will be put into lockers by businessme­n and big corporates. Prices will be determined on the basis of hunger,” he said.

Tikait hit out at the government saying they are claiming the farmer agitation is over. But there are 15,000 tractors standing at the Tikri border. Farmers have put up shacks below trees.

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