Cape Times

Farm reform protests grow

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UNDETERRED by the harsh winter of India’s capital, its toxic air and surging coronaviru­s cases, Sukhbinder Singh is among tens of thousands of farmers camped out in protest on the city’s outskirts, along with tractors, trailers, SUVs and food trucks.

The farmers say they have enough flour, potatoes and other provisions to stay put for six months if Prime Minister Narendra Modi does not meet their demand – a repeal of new laws that he has described as the biggest farm reforms in the country in decades and trade analysts have hailed as a booster shot for the world food market.

The sea of unmasked people at the heavily barricaded protest site on the main highway into northern Delhi is the biggest challenge Modi has faced from India’s politicall­y powerful farmers since he took office six years ago, and is a chink in his otherwise immense personal popularity.

The laws enacted by parliament in September are aimed at linking potential bulk buyers, such as Walmart Inc, Reliance Industries Ltd and Adani Enterprise­s Ltd, directly with farmers, bypassing government­regulated wholesale markets and layers of commission agents.

But more than 60 rice, wheat and potato growers from the farm states of Punjab and Haryana said the government was trying to privatise agricultur­e by eliminatin­g the agents, who are a vital cog of the farm economy and for thousands of farmers, the main line of credit. The middlemen provide quick funds for seeds and fertiliser­s, and even for family emergencie­s, said the farmers. The agents also help grade, weigh, pack and sell harvests to buyers.

While the farmers camped out on the highway are mainly from Haryana and Punjab, they claim to have support from all over the country. The All India Agricultur­al Workers Union, which claims to represent millions of rural farm hands, has vowed to launch a nationwide blockade this week to support the demands.

The protesters said a move to eliminate middlemen in the eastern state of Bihar had failed to draw new investment and its farmers were worse off as they often had to resort to fire sales in the absence of organised wholesale markets. “Some landholder­s from Bihar now work our farms,” said Sukhbinder Singh, 45, who said he grows wheat, potatoes and mustard in his 8ha farm in Haryana.

“This is the time for us to grow winter crops back in the village,” Singh said. “But if we don’t protest now, our next generation will curse us for not fighting the fight. The agents and us are interdepen­dent.”

For Punjab’s Jasbir Singh, a 45-yearold who said he owns 5ha of land, the middlemen are a lifeline for his farm and his family. Without all the documents that banks insist on, and based only on the likely future yield of his crop, he says commission agents have been lending him money every year. Ten years ago, it was for his sister’s wedding and this year he took on $5 000 (R76 000) more.

 ?? | Reuters ?? FARMERS gather around a buffalo cart as they shout slogans during a protest against the newly passed farm bills at the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border in Ghaziabad, yesterday.
| Reuters FARMERS gather around a buffalo cart as they shout slogans during a protest against the newly passed farm bills at the Delhi-Uttar Pradesh border in Ghaziabad, yesterday.

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