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‘Didn’t know I’d live to get this’ — 1971 PoW, Vir Chakra awardee receives Vijay Mashaal torch

Brigadier Hamir Singh (Retd), who was a young captain during the 1971 war against Pakistan, was honoured as part of India’s celebrations to mark 50 years of the victory.

Brigadier Hamir Singh (Retd), receives the Vijay Mashaal, in Jaipur Thursday | Via Indian Army

Brigadier Hamir Singh (Retd), receives the Vijay Mashaal, in Jaipur Thursday | Via Indian Army

New Delhi: On 14 December 1971, in the final days of the 13-day war for Bangladesh’s liberation, a young Army captain named Hamir Singh was captured by Pakistan during the battle of Daruchhian in Jammu and Kashmir. At the time, he had a severe bullet injury in his arm.

The war ended two days later with Pakistan’s surrender. But it would be nearly a year before the Army officer would make his way back to India.

After his return, Hamir Singh served the Army for two decades before retiring as Brigadier in September 1992.

On Thursday, the Vir Chakra recipient, now 82, found himself travelling back to his exploits in the war as he received the ‘Vijay Mashaal’ — a symbolic torch meant to honour his role — as part of India’s Swarnim Vijay Varsh celebrations to mark 50 years of the victory against Pakistan in 1971.

The year-long commemorations for the war’s golden jubilee began on 16 December last year as Prime Minister Narendra Modi lit the ‘Swarnim Vijay Mashaal’ from the eternal flame of the National War Memorial.

Talking to ThePrint over the phone from Jaipur, the former Army officer said he was highly honoured to receive the Vijay Mashaal.

“Honestly, I didn’t know that I would live to get this honour, 50 years since then,” he said.

Also Read: Indian Army had a ‘Ghost Regiment’. It spooked Pakistanis in 1971 and earned their praise

  family of Army officers

A third-generation Army officer, Brig. Singh was commissioned into the Grenadiers Regiment in December 1962.

His grandfather, Lt Phool Singh, was an officer in the erstwhile Jodhpur Lancers and served in the First World War. His father Maj. Gen. Kalyan Singh was an artillery officer commissioned in the second field regiment and participated in the 1962 India-China war.

 In the subsequent years, he served as an instructor in the Nigerian Defence Academy, and commanded an Infantry Battalion and an Infantry Brigade.

His capture

Brig. Singh was part of the 1971 war as a company commander with 14 Grenadiers.

 When he was captured on the afternoon of 14 December 1971, his arm had bullet injuries that shattered his bones and severely damaged his radial nerve (injury to radial nerve can result in an inability to straighten one’s wrist).

His sons — now serving Major Generals in the Army — were just five and seven years old at the time, Brig Singh said.

For the next six months, the Army officer was to stay in a Rawalpindi hospital undergoing multiple surgeries. The subsequent months were spent in a small space he shared with multiple other Indian prisoners of war (PoWs).

“Honestly, I lost dates after that, but for nearly six months, I stayed at a hospital undergoing surgeries,” he said.

In June 1972, he heard that some PoWs were being sent back to India. While two of his colleagues were sent back, he was left at the hospital, all alone.

He then conveyed to the Red Cross staff that he wanted to be shifted to the camp where the remaining PoWs were lodged, citing the fact that his treatment was over.

He stayed at the camp until 1 December 1972 when he and the other PoWs were repatriated.

His role in the war earned him a Vir Chakra, which is awarded for acts of gallantry in the presence of enemy.

As part of the 1971 war Golden Jubilee celebrations, the government is honouring the role of Indian soldiers. Among other things, four ‘Victory Mashaals (flaming torches)’ will be lit from the eternal flame at the National War Memorial and carried to various parts of the country, including villages of Param Vir Chakra and Maha Vir Chakra awardees of the war.

Additionally, soil from these villages and areas where major battles were fought is being brought to the memorial. Various commemorative events are scheduled to be held around India at which war veterans will be felicitated.


Who Really Insulted the Tricolour?

Narendra Modi’s comments on the tricolour and “insults to it” should be seen in the background of the nature of the current protests and the RSS’s ritual opposition to the same tricolour until recently.

Who Really Insulted the Tricolour?

“India was saddened by the insult to the tricolour on Republic Day” stated Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a few days ago.

Jawhar Sircar

He was referring, obviously, to the mayhem that broke out when farmers, their friends and enemies, streamed into Delhi on January 26.

‘India’, on behalf of whom Modi now speaks with unusual authority, is surely entitled to feel more than hurt if the flag was desecrated. This charge, however, camouflages more than it reveals. During the protest, the national flag atop Red Fort was not only untouched, but the Nishan Sahib that was hoisted on the fort’s ramparts was certainly not the flag of ‘Khalistan’ – as was let loose into the breeze, quite mischievously.

unnamed
SPEAKS BY ITSELF

It was at a considerable distance from the tricolour and its pole was nowhere near in height. What intrigues me the most is why the person who led the move to plant the flag is moving around so sure of himself and posting video messages on social media.

Since the entire world knows that he was (and may still be) associated with the ruling party, it is surely time for the nurser of hurts to come out and declare his ‘official’ position on him. After all, the man purported to have been behind the flag hoisting has flaunted his photograph next to the prime minister, and since this cannot be dismissed as ‘crowd scene’ snap, “the nation needs to know” who or what prompted him to cause the hurt.

 

deepThe narrative that is being sought to be peddled is, however, fraught with danger.

By highlighting that someone from the Sikh community defiled the national flag, an entire people is sought to be dragged in. The community has always produced excellent farmers and has historically provided the finest of soldiers – many more than people whose belligerent talk is certainly not matched by their numbers joining the army.

A patriotic community cannot be vilified just because it took the lead in opposing suspiciously rushed-through pieces of legislation.

What the dispensation’s cheerleaders have not understood, among countless other things, is that the long and peaceful agitation of farmers at Delhi’s borders is fast becoming a metaphor for righteous resistance – and may soon join the ranks of Chipko, Champaran or Bardoli.

Public imagination is in the process of inscribing the name of the tormentor who launched unprovoked depredations on agitating agriculturalists quite permanently into popular lore. Once that happens, woe betide the villain of such balladic tales, for his name shall be spat upon for ever.

Also read: In 2014, the Sikh Flag Flew at the Red Fort – And the Hindu Rightwing Had No Complaints

Even dropping innuendos about Sikhs fomenting trouble and proclaiming them or a section as ‘anti-national separatists’ without first providing solid evidence is outrageous. Some Khalistani supporters may have penetrated the huge ocean of protesting farmers, but can anyone swear that there is no foreign agent ensconced within the upper echelons of this regime – or any other?

PHOTO-2021-01-28-20-48-32

Punjab has suffered more than its share of political outrage, stoked often by religious fanatics and their opponents. It is only prudent not to stomp with jackboots on sensitive issues that may ignite other problems. To fling conspiracy theories around would also whip up outrage. It is imperative for the regime to desist from short-term outwitting games and, instead, attend to the disaffection caused by these Acts.

Two simple public statements may defuse the situation immediately – one, that the time-tested MSP (minimum support price) system would remain, and the other that all the talk of Ambani-Adani grabbing farm produce is not true.

OTHER LINKS WHO DONOT SUPPORT FARMERS :::PRAISES BILLLS

 

PHOTO-2021-01-27-19-43-03 PHOTO-2021-01-27-19-43-03_1 PHOTO-2021-01-27-19-43-04 PHOTO-2021-01-27-19-43-04_1

 

 

A ruler would then not have to dig deep trenches, build concrete walls and drive killer spikes to barricade himself from his own people. Besides, if we are to give some credence to organisations of agitating farmers, that have held together millions in absolute peace for over two months, there is certainly much more that what met the eye and the television cameras on India’s most boisterous Republic Day.

The identity of those agent provocateurs and others who broke into Delhi with so relative ease, much before the appointed hour of the peaceful ‘tractor rally’, and then fought pitched battles with the police needs just time and sincerity to be established. There is abundant camera footage available. It was the unruly exertions of these groups that incensed captive television audiences. The latter was larger than usual, as it was a holiday, and everything appeared to be working on cues. Anchors competed with each other to scream and condemn the violence – as is only expected when dramatic displays of indignation at dissent have become so institutionalised.

Also read: Why Was the Red Fort Left Unguarded When Delhi Was on ‘High Alert’?

Contemporary history tells us that India has seen many such and several more virulent protests in recent decades, but hardly ever has public vexation been titrated and channelised so effectively. Those who opposed well-fortified governments earlier were certainly not doing so by showering rose petals on the sentinels. But, they were not automatically condemned as seditionists and user-friendly media did not bay for their blood.

Let us recall, for instance, the Navnirman Andolan of Gujarat in which, in which Narendra Modi claims to have played an active role. Destruction of public property was rampant, as was arson, and credible reports indicate that nearly a hundred persons died in violent clashes with government forces. About 3,000 were injured and police records attest that over 8,000 were arrested.

Also read: The Emergency, and the BJP’s Hidden History of Student Protest

Literally, hundreds of other similar destructive public protests and eruptions have wracked the country since then, but regime-apologists were not to tear their vocal chords in frenzied bouts of feigned horror. The point is that protests do often boil over – in every age and in every country.

The perceived ‘violence’ in the USA during the recent ‘Black Lives Matter’ agitation is just one painful example. No one in their right mind can either encourage or condone violence. Rulers also need to make more sincere and less juvenile, media-targeted attempts to get to the roots of such effervescent angst.

When Modi mentions of India’s sadness at the insult to the tricolour, it is only befitting to recall the stand that his own parent organisation, the RSS, took just before Independence. Its mouthpiece, Organiser, mentioned in its issues of July 17 and 22, 1947, that the Indian tricolour will “never be respected and owned by the Hindus.”

According to it, “The word three is in itself an evil, and a flag having three colours will certainly produce a very bad psychological effect and is injurious to a country.”

This is obviously incorrect, as ‘three’ is so prominent in Hinduism – from the trishul to trimurti, the three-pronged sacred weapon of Hindus to the holy triumvirate of Brahma, Vishnu and Maheshwar.

Also read: A Farmer Can’t Be Draped in the Tricolour at His Funeral, But a Lynching Accused Can

Modi’s guru M.S. Golwalkar, the second chief of the RSS, also bemoaned that independent India’s “leaders have set up a new flag for the country – why did they do so?”

In his Bunch of Thoughts, he declared,, “Ours is an ancient and great nation with a glorious past. Then, had we no flag of our own? Had we no national emblem at all these thousands of years? Undoubtedly we had. Then why this utter void, this utter vacuum in our minds?” Golwalkar did not, however, elaborate which ancient national emblem or flag he was alluding to. We know, of course, that he wanted to replace the all-embracing tricolour flag with the Bhagwa Dhwaj, the saffron ‘split flag’ of the RSS, that represented only Hindus.

It is, therefore, appropriate to view Narendra Modi’s present comments on the tricolour and “insults to it” in this background. Far from disowning this heritage, he actually cherishes it. It was Sardar Patel, who he worships so publicly and at public expense, who actually compelled Golwalkar and the Hindu Right to retract their opposition to the Indian national flag. He set it as a pre-condition for lifting the 18-month ban on the RSS and for releasing its leaders from jail.

It may, therefore, be wiser to let India and Indians decide for themselves which insult to the national flag really hurts them more.

Jawhar Sircar is a former culture secretary, Government of India. He tweets at @jawharsircar.


The Farmer Has Bypassed Delhi and That Should Worry Modi

The Farmer Has Bypassed Delhi and That Should Worry Modi

The irony of this is lost on a government drowning in its testosterone: with every nail-studded barricade installed at Tikri, Ghazipur or Singhu, Delhi is making itself progressively redundant to the ongoing course of events, and perhaps even to the future shape of things in India. A subterranean tsunami is slowly building in the country, and the power elite, the pampered middle class and wheeler-dealers of the capital are blissfully unaware of it.

The farmers do not need Delhi to survive or even to prosper, they are creatures of the soil and the elements, and know how to live in harmony with them. They have been at our borders for almost three months now and have taken nothing from Delhi, except, perhaps water, and the Internet – and a lot of abuse. Now the rulers have stopped even the supply of these essentials, having practiced the art for a long time in Kashmir. But the farmers are unfazed – they now get them in abundance from their villages.

Also read: The Shame of Fortress Delhi

For me, in fact, Narendra Modi’s cat was let out of the bag by an economist friend who (in defence of the farm laws) informed me that rural unemployment on a huge scale was inevitable as a country progressed to “developed nation” status. He sent me some charts to establish the correlation between gross domestic product (GDP) and rural unemployment: the higher the GDP, the higher the unemployment in agricultural communities! This is the neoliberal, International Monetary Fund-cum-World Bank formula which has ensured that 100 of the world’s richest billionaires have more wealth than half the world’s population. Modi’s farm laws will be the Indian version of this formula.

The insidious objective is to create cheap labour for industry and big capital. This is already happening in India – 36 million farmers have left farming between 2004 and 2012, 50 million have been “displaced” by capital projects and 500,000 more are uprooted every year, tribals are being evicted from forests. There are already 120 million migrant labourers. It is a dismal picture but not dismal enough for our politicians and wanna-be billionaires. The farm laws were intended to speed up this process, and the barricades are a statement that the government will enforce them, come hell, high water, Rihanna or Greta Thunberg

But our sturdy farmers, who are more intelligent than we Dilliwallahs give them credit for, have little interest in the barricades, the concertina wires, the foot-long embedded nails blocking their way to Delhi –  the product of the fear, paranoia, incompetence and malice of those who rule in Delhi. For the farmers have no reason to go to Delhi anymore, after leaving their visiting card there on January 26.

Every institution they appealed to for the last six months has let them down: parliament, the Supreme Court, the media, mainstream political parties, even the wealthy burghers of South Delhi. The lawyers are silent, the veterans are citing discipline as an excuse for their timidity, the celebrities have tucked their heads beneath their tails, the embassies are “watching the situation”, the IMF and World Bank are hopeful that Modi would carry the day. Delhi has let down the farmer, and he no longer has any need for India’s capital – the word “capital” signifying many things.

And so the farmer has decided to ‘Bypass Delhi’ and take it out of the equation: Rakesh Tikait went to Jind to attend a mahapanchayat on February 3; he avoided Delhi and took the longer route via Haryana. The symbolism of this cannot be ignored. And at Jind, he announced that he will now take the protests to other parts of India. This reminds me of two historical events.

One: the Maginot line was built by France on its borders with Germany to deter any invasion by Hitler. It was so heavily fortified that it was considered impregnable. But when the time came, the Germans simply bypassed it and rolled their Panzers through the Ardennes forest into France without any opposition.

Two – I am thankful to Punya Prasun Bajpai for pointing this out in a video – when Mahatma Gandhi saw that he was making no progress with the British in Delhi and Shimla, he decided to head in the opposite direction – to Dandi in Gujarat – to get a pinch of salt. That further helped to spread his message to the rest of India, to universalise it and give it more strength.

BJP shot itself in the foot

By closing off Delhi, literally and figuratively, to the farmers, Modi and Amit Shah may have committed their biggest miscalculation. They have forced Tikait to change his strategy midway. He is doing three things now: one, he has made Western Uttar Pradesh, not Punjab, the hub of the movement.

This is the region that enabled the BJP to come to power in the state in 2017, winning more than 100 Vidhan Sabha seats in just this belt. The BJP did so by creating a communal rift (remember the Muzzafarnagar riots?) between the dominant communities here, the Jats and the Muslims. Now, Tikait has healed the rift, united both against the government, and demolished the formula that won BJP western UP.

Two, as the de-facto supremo of the farmers’ movement now, Tikait is more acceptable to the rest of the Hindi (or Hindu) heartland than the earlier Sikh leaders and he will be able to take the protests to the other states – Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Himachal, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand – more successfully. This is precisely the belt that allows BJP to win big in parliamentary elections, and the spread of the agitation here does not augur well for it. It would have made more sense for the BJP to have limited the protests to Delhi and its vicinity.

Also read: Watch | Rakesh Tikait: The Man Behind the Revival of the Farmers’ Protest

Third, in India, political parties have always won elections, not on the basis of their track records or manifestos, but on the manipulation of identities – religion, caste, backwardness, region. The BJP has been particularly smart at this.

But the farmers’ movement has now begun to erase these sub-identities in favour of a larger one – the farmer identity (which includes the landless labourer, the artisan, even the village shopkeeper). There will be only one identity now, one concern and one demand. With nothing to divide, the Great Divider will not be able to rule: it was a lesson the British had finally learnt, and the BJP will now learn it the hard way.

The game has changed, but the farmers have made it clear that the rules have not – winner takes all. This rule had been made by an arrogant and over-reaching government and it may just come back to bite it.

The nails on the road at Ghazipur could well be the nails in the BJP’s coffin. The pampered and indifferent upper middle classes of Delhi can now live in peace – the battle has been taken away from them, they no longer count.

Avay Shukla is a retired IAS officer. A version of this article appeared on his blog and has been edited by The Wire for style.

 


We stand with farmers, Greta: Young protesters

We stand with farmers, Greta: Young protesters

Greta Thunberg. Reuters file photo

Amarjot Kaur
Tribune News Service
Chandigarh, February 5

Young guns of ‘generation Z’ today gathered at Matka Chowk here to support farmers and Greta Thunberg, a Swedish environmental activist known for challenging world leaders to take immediate action against climate change. Moved by her tweets and the plight of farmers protesting against the new agricultural laws, the children expressed concern over food security and the future of India.

Udaybir Singh (12) said: “I support Greta for standing up for the farmers. I read her tweet and was deeply moved by her concern for the country.”

Nine-year-old Harveer Pratap Singh stood at the chowk, shouting slogans of ‘Jai Jawan, Jai Kisan’. He said: “I am here to support the farmers who are rightfully asking for the black laws to be repealed. The government is calling us terrorists, but we are farmers. Farmers are not terrorists.”

Jiya, a 15-year-old city student, backed Greta’s tweet ‘I still stand with farmers’, and said: “I like that Greta’s speaking about the farmers plight and she’s right in supporting the farmers. The government should at least address the issue.”

Zorawar Singh (12) shared: “My father’s in the Army and my family has been farming for generations. The farmers are not anti-nationals. They are fighting for their rights. I am here to support them, just like Greta did.”

Anvi Gupta (12) said: “I saw the news yesterday about Greta and I don’t like what the government is doing. They are hurting farmers for no apparent reason and are supporting private companies. I don’t think the future of this country is secure.”

Protests at Sector 20, Marriot Chowk

People protested at the Sector 20 roundabout and the Marriot Chowk. Parneet Kaur, a teacher, said: “I’m here because these farm laws are not just anti-farmer, but anti-consumer too.” At the Sector 35 roundabout, the protesters from Dhanas distributed badges and flags of the Bhartiya Kisan Union to supporters.


Farmers protest in Ambala, Kurukshetra

Farmers protest in Ambala, Kurukshetra

Farmers blocked national and state highways for three hours at Ambala and Kurukshetra.

Tribune News Service

Ambala, February 6

On the call of a nationwide chakka jam given by farmer unions, farmers today blocked national and state highways for three hours at seven locations each in Ambala and Kurukshetra.

Farmers from Haryana and Punjab held a joint protest near the Shambhu toll plaza and raised slogans against the Union Government. Farmer leaders accused the government of making attempts to disturb harmony and not accepting farmers’ demands.

The farmers also blocked the highways near Devi Nagar, Saini Majra near Karasan and Hema Majra in Ambala, Rattangarh near Pipli, Teokar, Ladwa road and Karah Sahib in Kurukshetra.

united they stand

Earlier, we had planned to hold our protest at the Shambhu toll plaza, but a few farmers from Punjab suggested that we should hold a joint protest as it is an area on the border of Haryana and Punjab. It is also an attempt to give a clear message to the government that it should stop making attempts to create differences between Haryana and Punjab. —Gulab Singh, Farmer leader

Due to these blockades, the local police diverted traffic towards alternative routes. However, a large number of vehicles and roadways buses of Punjab preferred to wait till the blockades were lifted. Some people were also seen travelling on foot.

Harmit Singh, who was waiting near the Shambhu toll plaza, said, “I drive a commercial vehicle and after offloading some stock, I was on my way back to Punjab. I extend my full support to the farmers and I will keep waiting here till the blockade is lifted.”

Bhartiya Kisan Union (Charuni) Ambala district vice-president Gulab Singh said, “Earlier, we had planned to hold our protest at the toll plaza but around three days ago, a few farmers from Punjab suggested that we should hold a joint protest as it is a bordering area of Haryana and Punjab. Following their suggestion, we held a joint protest. It is also an attempt to give a clear message to the government that it should stop making attempts to create differences between Haryana and Punjab. We have held a peaceful agitation, the government is under pressure and we are hopeful that our demands will be met soon.”


‘Kisan Kesari Samman’ for Abhay Chautala

‘Kisan Kesari Samman’ for Abhay Chautala

Tribune News Service

Hisar, February 5

A ‘kisan mahapanchayat’ today honoured INLD leader Abhay Chautala, who has resigned from the Assembly in support of the farmers’ protest, with the “Kisan Kesari Samman”.

“For me, there is no post bigger than the farmers’ cause. I will be back in the Assembly with people’s blessings in the byelections,” Abhay said while addressing farmers at Nathusari Chopta in Sirsa.

He further said, “Prime Minister Narendra Modi had assured farmers of waiving their loans and implementing the Swaminathan Commission recommendations. But under pressure from the corporate sector, the Centre took an about-turn. It took steps which will leave farmers at the mercy of corporate houses.”

The former Ellenabad MLA hit out at leaders, who claimed to follow in the footsteps of late Deputy Prime Minister Chaudhary Devi Lal. “They have shut themselves in their homes, fearing backlash of farmers.”

Abhay urged farmers to participate in tomorrow’s “chakka jam” announced by the Sanyukt Kisan Morcha.


Will dedicate medals to farmers: Skaters

Will dedicate medals to farmers: Skaters

Sangrur SSP Vivek Sheel Soni giving hockey sticks to sportspersons belonging to underprivileged families.

Parvesh Sharma

Tribune News Service

Sangrur, February 5

Several state and national-level skaters, who belong to underprivileged families, have been mobilising support for the farmers’ agitation against the central farm laws at Delhi borders.

The Sangrur police have been helping these players by providing them the required equipment and ground at the Police Lines. The players, who also work as labourers, plumbers and even watchmen, have announced that on winning medals in the forthcoming state competition from February 12 to 15 at Sangrur, they would dedicate those to farmers.

Not in a position to support financially

Since we are not in a position to contribute much to the stir financially, we have decided to dedicate the medals that we will win in the forthcoming state-level competition to our farmers. — Arun Kumar, state-level skater

“My father is a rickshaw-puller and finds it difficult to meet my requirements. But with the support of the Sangrur police, I have been skating and have won gold in state games twice. I also work as a watchman. Since we all understand the importance of helping the farmers, we are trying to mobilise maximum support for them,” said Rahul Singh (19), while discussing the farmers’ agitation with his friends on the ground.

“We are requesting other players to do the same,”said Arun Kumar, who has won a silver medal in state games and is also learning the work of plumber to support his father.

Sangrur SSP Vivek Sheel Soni has directed his officers to provide these promising players all support on priority to improve their performance. “With the support of DGP Dinkar Gupta, I have been trying to provide maximum facilities to sportspersons, including the ground for practice,” said the SSP.


Canadian instructor takes outdoor Bhangra classes amid heavy snowfall; video goes viral

Canadian instructor takes outdoor Bhangra classes amid heavy snowfall; video goes viral

Tribune Web Desk
Chandigarh, February 6

A video of a Canadian dancer doing Bhangra during heavy snowfall has gone viral.

The dancer, Gurdeep Pandher, shared a short clip of his Bhangra session with a few people on the microblogging website.

This session was at Yukon, a territory in northwest Canada.

Gurdeep Pandher conducts outdoor bhangra classes. In the two-minute clip, Gurdeep taught Bhangra steps to four people of the French community in a snow-covered area.

The people looked equally excited to learn, and seemed absolutely unfazed by the snowfall.

“Outdoor winter Bhangra class in the Yukon. When it was -20 degree C (feeling like -30 degree C with windchill) and the pandemic on top of that, these friends from the Yukon’s French community joined me for a “physically-distanced and pandemic-safe” bhangra class for joy, exercise and positivity,” read Gurdeep Pandher’s caption.

Gurdeep Pandher’s video has gone viral with over one lakh views and collected 4,000 likes.

 


‘Chakka jam’: Has the Centre managed to isolate Punjab farmers from counterparts in UP, Delhi and Uttarakhand

‘Chakka jam’: Has the Centre managed to isolate Punjab farmers from counterparts in UP, Delhi and Uttarakhand

Farmers shout slogans during their ongoing protest against Centre’s farm laws, at Ghazipur border in New Delhi on Saturday. PTI photo

Vibha Sharma
Tribune News Service
New Delhi, February 6

Amid a relatively uneventful ‘chakka jam’ on Saturday,  indications are that the BJP-led Centre not only “managed” the situation well but also managed to “isolate” Punjab farmers from their counterparts in Uttar Pradesh, Delhi and Uttarakhand who did not participate in on Saturday’s event against the three farm laws.

While the decision regarding UP and Uttarakhand was taken at a meeting between Samyukta Kisan Morcha’s Balbir Singh Rajewal and Bhartiya Kisan Union Rakesh Tikait “in mind the ongoing agriculture activities and situations” sources are pointing to “other reasons” behind the surprise announcement on Friday.

Almost four months have passed since the new sugar season commenced in October and the Uttar Pradesh government is yet to announce State-Advised Price (SAP) for sugarcane, making it difficult for farmers to get cane payment from sugar mills.

Though the state government has not clarified the reason for the delay in announcement of SAP for sugarcane—the main crop of western UP—speculations are it is “waiting for the farmers’ agitation to be over”. While cane farmers are expecting a higher increase in the SAP, sugar mills are resisting any such move. The UP government has not revised the SAP of Rs 315 per quintal for three seasons.

Apart from the underlying anger and uncertainty among sugarcane farmers, sources say “majority of BKU cadres are currently engaged in Delhi”, meaning that BKU leaders were also “skeptical about success of chakka jam” in UP.

“The BKU (Tikait) has not objected to piling up of arrears of Rs 15,000 crore and delay in announcement of SAP. What could a three-hour ‘chakka jam’ achieved,” questioned a farmer leader, underlining the various political pulls at play over the issue

The “shift” in attention and focus from Singhu and Tikri (where Punjab unions have been camping) towards UP and Ghazipur is a cause of much concern among those who initiated the agitation against the three laws.

In the developments following the January 26 Delhi violence, Rakesh Tikait has emerged as a “hero and main attraction” in ‘mahapanchayats’ not just in UP but also Haryana. Tomorrow he will participate in two ‘mahapanchayats’ in Charkhi Dadri, according to BKU.

Meanwhile, sources say “clarity can be expected regarding the Centre’s next move on the three laws next week. Prime Minister Narendra Modi is expected to reply to the Motion of Thanks on the President’s Address in the Rajya Sabha”.

 


3 more held in connection with Red Fort violence on R-Day Total 126 arrested so far, police say have released pictures of over 70 who were involved in violence

3 more held in connection with Red Fort violence on R-Day

View of damage at Red Fort in New Delhi. Tribune file photo

New Delhi, February 6

The Delhi Police have arrested three more people in connection with the Red Fort incident on Republic Day, taking the total number of those in its custody for the violence that took place across the national capital during the farmers’ tractor parade to 126, officials said on Saturday.

The three have been identified as Harpreet Singh (32), Harjeet Singh (48) and Dharmender Singh (55), all residents of Delhi, they said.

They were nabbed by the special investigating team (SIT) of north district on Wednesday. The crime branch, which is also investigating the cases, formally arrested them on Friday, police said.

Thousands of farmers protesting the Centre’s new agri laws had clashed with the police during the tractor parade on January 26.

Many of the protesters, driving tractors, reached the Red Fort and entered the monument. Some protesters even hoisted religious flags on its domes and a flagstaff at the ramparts, where the national flag is unfurled on Independence Day.

Police said they have released pictures of over 70 people who were involved in the violence on January 26. Now their identification is underway, they said.

So far, a total of 126 people have been arrested in connection with the Republic Day violence across the national capital, police said.

“We are constantly examining the videos and footage which we have received to get clear picture of the people involved in the violence. The process of identification is underway,” Delhi Police PRO Chinmoy Biswal said.

The objectionable videos on farmers’ issue being uploaded from locations out of India are also being examined. The Cyber Cell of the Delhi Police is investigating the matter, he added.

The Cyber Prevention Awareness and Detection (CyPAD) unit of Delhi Police has served around seven to eight notices.

“We have sent notices to around seven to eight people. However, only two of them have responded. They have asked for some time to join the investigation,” a senior police officer said.

The Delhi Police on Wednesday arrested a man named Dharmendra Singh in connection with the violence at Red Fort during the farmers’ tractor parade on Republic Day.

Earlier, the police had announced cash reward of Rs 1 lakh for information that can lead to the arrest of actor Deep Sidhu, Jugraj Singh, Gurjot Singh and Gurjant Singh who hoisted flags at the Red Fort or were involved in the act.

A cash reward of Rs 50,000 each was also announced for Buta Singh, Sukhdev Singh, Jajbir Singh and Iqbal Singh for allegedly instigating protesters. PTI