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Govt’s meeting with farmer groups inconclusive; next round on Jan 8 Unions to hold their meeting on Tuesday to decide future course of action

Vibha Sharma
Tribune News Service
New Delhi, January 4

Govt's meeting with farmer groups inconclusive; next round on Jan 8

The farmers meeting with the government on Monday ended without any outcome on the main issue, that is repealing the three Acts or a law on MSP.

“Farmers spoke only about repeal. Government said they will consult further and get back. The next meeting on January 8,” said union leaders in the meeting.

Farmer unions will have their meeting tomorrow to decide the future course of action, they said.

The government is not interested in resolving the issue, said farmer leaders.

“Union ministers are saying the same thing again and again. We will hold a meeting tomorrow to decide our course . We will not go home, till the time the laws are repealed,” BKU leader Rakesh Tikait said.

Sources said the government offered a joint committee on MSP.


Forces oppose mapping by private firms

Forces oppose mapping by private firms

Chief of Defence Staff General Bipin Rawat during his visit to the “forward most air maintained” post in Subansiri valley, Arunachal Pradesh. PTI

Ajay Banerjee

Tribune News Service

New Delhi, January 3

Citing security reasons, the armed forces have opposed a proposal of the Ministry of Defence (MoD) seeking to permit geospatial mapping of border and coastal areas by private entities.

At present, all areas up to a distance of 25 km from the land borders or from the coastline require special permission for terrain mapping.

Security concerns

  • At present, all areas up to a distance of 25 km from the land border or coastline require special permission for terrain mapping
  • Armed forces have opposed the proposal of doing away with the provision of special permission, citing security concerns
  • They want no change in the process, except for minimising the time for okaying or rejecting such permissions

Google Maps, app-based taxi services, food or shopping portals, location services, etc. are among other applications that need mapping data. Service providers in coastal cities need permission from the MoD. Similar is the case with land borders in Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh, Himachal Pradesh and Rajasthan, etc. The proposal through the MoD is to “review the policy on geospatial and geophysical systems” and seeks to allow private entities to freely map the areas falling within the “no-go” zone. It also seeks permission to map the terrain underwater within 12 nautical miles from the coast. The only exception would be the pin-pointed areas that the forces want excluded. At a meeting on December 31, the armed forces opposed doing away with special permission, or allowing un-restricted mapping in “no-go” zones or mapping of underwater terrain, sources said. The armed forces want no change in the process, except minimising the time for okaying or rejecting such permissions.

The MoD proposal is that in areas where smartphones are permitted and where delivery via shopping portals is allowed should be opened for mapping by private entities. A committee of the Niti Aayog, having representatives from all security agencies, had suggested against allowing mapping by private entities.

Software and equipment used in geo-spatial mapping comes from abroad and data of terrain (called elevation mapping) is vital for long-range missiles to travel and hit with precision. This could be compromised, the armed forces have suggested. The US or the European countries that have done such detailed mapping have the equipment to counter its misuse, but India does not have such technology. The Surveyor General, under the Ministry of Science and Technology, maps the terrain for the forces and has achieved an accuracy that allows precision.


Harsimrat faces protests in Mansa, cancels programmes

Harsimrat faces protests in Mansa, cancels programmes

Tribune News Service

Mansa, January 3

Former Union Minister and Bathinda MP Harsimrat Kaur Badal today faced protests from farmers during her visit to villages in the Budhlada subdivision of Mansa district. Later, she cancelled her four programmes in villages.

Farmers staged a protest claiming that the SAD and Harsimrat had supported the contentious agricultural Bills when these were tabled in the Cabinet and now they were befooling the people.

Hundreds of people raised slogans and tried to gherao her, but the police escorted her convoy out of the area. This was her first visit to an area in her constituency after her resignation from the Union Cabinet.

Harsimrat had come here to pay condolences to the families of farmers who died during the agitation. The farmers hailed from Gurddi, Bachhuana, Dharmapura, Bare, Dodra, Boha and Bhadra villages.

However, in Dodra and Bhadra villages, locals and activists of the Bhartiya Kisan Union (Ekta Ugrahan, Dakaunda and Qadian) groups, started staging protests against her.

A message was also sent by family members of Piara Singh, a farmer who died during the agitation and hailed from Dharampura village, that they did not want to meet Harsimrat, said sources. This was confirmed by Vasava Singh, a leader of the Bhartiya Kisan Union (Dakaunda).

On the other hand, Harsimrat alleged that the protests were a ploy of opposition parties.

Claiming that the SAD was still with the farmers, she said, “I left the Cabinet and NDA. Even today, I am standing shoulder to shoulder with the farmers in their struggle against the Modi government at the Centre.”

“I did not sign any document in favour of these laws. I opposed the enactment of the laws,” Harsimrat said. Appealing to Prime Minister Narendra Modi to meet the protesting farmers, she said he should redress their grievances and repeal the laws.


Time for govt to resolve row over farm laws

The Modi govt is handling the farmers’ protest as it would handle any trade union protest. Attempts to divide the movement have met with the ridicule they deserved. Now, the govt is out to drown the movement with propaganda. It may work partly with the urban middle class, but it’s not possible to demonise farmers like any other section.Time for govt to resolve row over farm laws

Upsurge: The present agitation by the farmers is the 21st-century version of the peasant rebellions of colonial times. PTI

Yogendra Yadav

President, Swaraj India

Ever heard of “moral economy of the peasant”? You must understand this awkward phrase if you wish to make sense of the farmers’ rebellion that has arrived at the doorsteps of the national capital. Policymakers must understand this to see why their argument has no purchase with the farmers. PM Modi must understand this to realise why his approach to handling this will not work, or why the government must give in, sooner than later.

The concept of ‘moral economy’ is simple. First used by British historian EP Thompson to understand the 18th-century food riots in England, the basic idea is that the poor operate with a moral vision, a sense of right and wrong, just and unjust, which refuses to obey the rationality of the market. The concept was extended by James Scott to explain peasant rebellions in South East Asia. He showed that the changes introduced by colonial authorities challenged the ‘subsistence ethics’ of the peasants, leading them to rebel. Ranajit Guha’s classic book Elementary Aspects of Peasant Insurgency in Colonial India deployed this to understand a series of peasant rebellions in the 19th century, including 1857. He showed that what appeared to the colonial masters as strange, irrational and spontaneous eruptions of violence by the natives were organised acts of resistance. The new system of agriculture introduced by the colonial State violated the basic ethics of the peasant, their sense of dignity and their intuitive sense of what was their due. Hence, the rage, outrage and eruption of violence against every symbol of colonial authority.

Cut to Singhu border of Delhi in the last month of 2020. Sure, these farmers do not look like the peasant rebels of the 19th century. Their langars are sumptuous. You can get even jalebi, if you are lucky. Their trolleys and tents are warm, equipped with solar panels to charge their phones. Some of the tractors are fitted with hi-fi sound systems. You can spot SUVs as well. Their cousins at Shahjahanpur border live in more frugal conditions (I write this column from one of these basic tents at this morcha, a constant draft to remind me of 7°C outside). But these farmers are not the hungry rebels who joined food riots. There is no eruption of violence in the present case, it follows the grammar of modern democratic protest.

Yet there is something common between the current upsurge of the farmers and the 19th century peasant rebellions. As in the case of their predecessors, the farmers today are outraged by an attempt to disrupt the existing agrarian arrangement. It is not that they are happy with the existing system. But they fear, with good reason, that the new system could be worse. Farming is increasingly uncertain, unremunerative and undignified. If monsoon is bad, they lose their crop. If the monsoon is good, they lose on prices. Farmers’ children do not wish to take to farming. An average farmer carries a grudge against the system that he or she finds unfair and unjust. In this context, the three farm laws passed by the Modi government have become a symbol of all that is wrong with the way the system treats the farmers. The manner in which these laws were pushed without any consultation with the principal stakeholders reminds the farmers of the contempt with which they are treated.

Farmers do not read the fine print of these laws, but they can smell them. And they don’t like it. Farmers of Punjab, Haryana and some other regions can sense the gradual dismantling of the mandi system that has been their lifeline for the last few decades. Farmers from other regions, who do not yet benefit from the mandi-based state procurement, can also foresee diminishing chances of their benefitting from such a system. They are not happy with the government, but the prospects of the government leaving them at the mercy of market forces exacerbate their worst fears. This fear is passed on by word of mouth, which is trusted more than any media. The message takes many forms, including rumours, just as it did during the 19th century peasant protests.

The moral outrage lies at the heart of the present upsurge. This is no longer about the calculus of gains and losses, about prospects of prices to be obtained outside the Agricultural Produce Market Committee (APMC), about the potential gains of contract farming. In a way, this is no longer about the three laws or this government. Now, this is about the way farmers have been treated by successive regimes, about the systematic discrimination that they suffer in the system. It is now about the dignity of farmers, their very being or ‘hond’ as they say in Punjabi. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party and its formal and informal spokespersons have fuelled this fire by throwing indiscriminate allegations about the farmers being ‘Khalistanis’ or foreign agents. At least for Punjab and parts of Haryana, this is now an emotional issue.

Hence, the community dimension of the current upsurge. Once a movement touches the moral nerve of society, community networks come into play. Gurdwaras and their resources are at the disposal of the farmers. Khap panchayats have jumped into the fray to support the cause, as have the NRIs. Boundaries between professionals and the community have been blurred. All kinds of local clubs and organisations have chipped in, from lawyers’ organisations to sports clubs. Those in uniform are privately with the farmers. This is not just a farmers’ protest or farmers’ movement anymore. This is the 21st-century version of farmers’ rebellion.

This is why the government’s handling of this upsurge is counter-productive. The Modi government is handling it as it would handle any trade union protest. The usual tricks of dodge, derail and divert have not worked. Attempts at dividing the movement by reportedly getting ‘non-existent’ farmer leaders and farmers’ organisations to meet the government have met with the ridicule these deserved. Now it is out to drown the movement with propaganda. It may work partly with the urban middle class, but it is not possible to demonise the farmers the way any other section can be. So, it is now down to a waiting game, as the government hopes to tire the farmers out or play some insidious game.

Meeting the protesting farmers over the last month, I can say for sure that this won’t work. Farmers know that this is their last battle, aar-paar ki ladai, as they say. With the passage of time, this upsurge is growing. All the morchas around Delhi are growing in numbers and moral strength. Farmers across the country now share a sense that the government is doing something big and bad. The longer the government takes to realise this, the higher the cost for it and the country.


Centre wants to impose Prez rule in state: Sidhu

Centre wants to impose Prez rule in state: Sidhu

avjot Singh Sidhu. File photo

Amritsar, January 3

Amid protest against the newly enacted farm laws, former state Cabinet Minister Navjot Singh Sidhu said the BJP-led Centre was creating grounds for imposing President’s rule in Punjab.

He expressed his apprehension through his tweet saying, “There’s no law and order problem in Punjab. Farmers dying on Delhi’s borders should be the government’s real concern but it is maligning Punjabis and scuttling our democratic voice by projecting us as anti-national to safeguard corporate interests and create grounds for President’s rule.”

In the backdrop, reports surfaced about damage to mobile towers of a telecom firm owned by a corporate house in the state. Following this, the BJP state leadership has accused the Congress of not maintaining law and order in the state. Meanwhile, dejected by “offensive comments” being used by the BJP leadership against the farmers’ peaceful protest, senior leader of Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) Kuldeep Singh Dhaliwal has served a legal notice to Union Minister Giriraj Singh. — TNS

Rs8 lakh relief for family of advocate who ended life

Rs8 lakh relief for family of advocate who ended life

Amarjit Singh Rai. File photo

Our Correspondent

Fazilka, January 3

A large number of residents took part in the last rites of advocate Amarjit Singh Rai who ended his life in support of farmers’ agitation at the Tikri border a week ago.

Jalalabad MLA Raminder Singh Awla, Fazilka MLA Davinder Singh Ghubaya, former minister Hans Raj Josan, Jalalabad Bar Association president Rohit Dahuja and farmer leaders paid tributes to Rai at a ceremony at Jalalabad on Saturday.

Awla handed over a cheque for Rs 5 lakh to the family members of the deceased on behalf of the Punjab Government. Besides, Rs 1 lakh each were given to the family by the Jalalabad Bar Association, Bar Council of Punjab and Haryana High Court and the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee.


Withdraw dung dump FIR or will block roads: BKU (Rajewal)

Withdraw dung dump FIR or will block roads: BKU (Rajewal)

A BKU (Rajewal) activist addresses the media in Jalandhar on Sunday.

Tribune News Service

Jalandhar, january 3

Members of the Bhartiya Kisan Union (Rajewal) today threatened to block major roads in Jalandhar and hold protests at BJP leaders’ residences if an FIR against those accused of dumping cow dung at the entrance to party leader Tikshan Sud’s house wasn’t withdrawn by January 6.

Union members said the farmers’ act was in response to BJP leaders’ alleged inflammatory statements amid a growing number of deaths at the Delhi border. An FIR under Sections 452 (trespass after preparation for hurt), 506 (criminal intimidation), 323 (voluntarily causing hurt), 307 (attempt to murder), 148 (rioting) and 149 (unlawful assembly) of the IPC had been lodged against a Dal Khalsa member and several unidentified protesters. The protesters had taken exception to Sud’s reported statement that “most farmers were unaware of farm laws and were going there on a picnic”. Kulwinder Singh, union’s district general secretary, said: “BJP leaders have been making repeated statements about farmers amidst loss of lives at the Delhi border.”

“We give an ultimatum to the state government to withdraw the FIR lodged under Section 307 and other grave offences against farmers at Hoshiarpur by January 6 or we will block roads in Jalandhar. In the coming days, we will bring such tractor-trailers to BJP leaders’ residences regularly.”

“In the middle of deaths at Singhu, if a leader says farmers go there on a picnic then it is bound to cause anger. We do not approve of the farmers’ act either. But in a democracy, an attempt-to-murder FIR can’t be lodged for dumping dung. We are not scared of FIRs. We just want peace in the state. But the government, rather than acting against the minister for provoking farmers, has lodged an FIR under serious offences,” he said.

Hoshiarpur SSP Navjot Singh Mahal said: “The FIR was lodged on a complaint received by the police. An SIT has been formed and is looking into the matter. Action will only be taken as per sections that merit the act by protesters. If any sections are found unwanted, these will be removed.”

On his part, Sud said his statement had been taken out of context. “I’m from farming background and haven’t said anything against farmers. Everyone has the right to protest. But we are against those who in the garb of protest trespass on to people’s homes. The farm leaders had never asked people to dump things on residential premises.”


Farmers, cops clash near BJP event Barricades torn down in Sangrur | Two protesters, three police officials injured

Farmers, cops clash near BJP event

Police officials try to stop a tractor-trailer during a clash with protesting farmers in Sangrur on Sunday. Tribune photo

Tribune News Service

Sangrur, January 3

Farmers clashed with the police near the Sangrur-Patiala bypass when the latter tried to stop them from marching towards the venue of a meeting of BJP leaders being presided over by party’s Punjab chief Ashwani Sharma. Farmers broke the first barricade but when they tried to break the second one, a scuffle ensued causing injuries to two farmers and three cops.

“The police must register an FIR against the state BJP chief for causing tension in Sangrur deliberately by calling a meeting despite being aware that we will not allow it. Two farmers have suffered injuries and are under treatment. We will keep opposing the visits of BJP leaders,” said Gobindar Singh Mangwal, BKU (Ugrahan) Sangrur block president.

To prevent any trouble, senior police officers from Patiala were also deployed but the problem started when protesting members of various organisations tried to move towards the residence of Sangrur BJP chief Randeep Deol after breaking the first barricade.

“The Congress government has been supporting BJP leaders rather than banning their meetings. It shows that Congress and BJP are two sides of the same coin,” said Jasdeep Singh, a leader of the Kirti Kisan Union.

Farmer Gurpreet Singh and another protester along with Inspector Harwinder Singh (Training School) and Constables Harpreet Singh and Beant Singh have suffered injuries.

During the meeting, Ashwani Sharma said peaceful protest was a democratic right, but some miscreants were creating problems for them.

“In a democracy, we have the right to conduct meetings and farmers have the right to protest, but our political opponents are creating problems for us,” he said.

After a meeting at the residence of Deol, Sharma also went to the house of another BJP leader Satwant Singh Punia at Gurdaspura, where two farmers raised slogans against the BJP.

Sangrur SSP Vivek Sheel Soni said farmers had a scuffle with cops. “Our officers had a narrow escape as some farmers tried to run over the cops after breaking the first barricade. Further investigations are on,” Soni said.


State BJP chief faces protest in Moga

State BJP president Ashwani Sharma faced stiff opposition in Moga from farmers during his visit to district president Vinay Sharma’s house. The farmers raised slogans against the BJP leadership and showed black flags. Reacting to the incidents, the BJP state chief termed the protests a conspiracy by the Congress


First time such arrogant govt in power, must withdraw farm laws unconditionally: Sonia ‘Governments that ignore public sentiments in a democracy cannot govern for long’

First time such arrogant govt in power, must withdraw farm laws unconditionally: Sonia

Sonia Gandhi. PTI file photo

New Delhi, January 3 

In a scathing attack on the Centre over the farmers’ protests, Congress president Sonia Gandhi on Sunday said that for the first time since independence such an “arrogant” government has come to power that cannot see the sufferings of ‘annadatas’, and demanded that the new farm laws be immediately withdrawn unconditionally.

In a statement in Hindi, she said governments and their leaders who ignore public sentiments in a democracy cannot govern for long and it is now quite clear that the protesting farmers will not bow in the face of the Centre’s policy of “tire and pushover”.

“There is still time, the Modi government should leave the arrogance of power and immediately withdraw the three black laws unconditionally to end the agitation of the farmers who are dying in the cold and rain. This is Rajdharma and a true tribute to the farmers who have lost their lives,” Gandhi said.

The Modi government should remember that democracy means protecting the interests of the people and the farmers-workers, she said.

“Along with the people of the country, I am also disturbed seeing the condition of the ‘annadatas’ who have been agitating for 39 days at the borders of Delhi in the bitter cold and rain in support of their demands,” Gandhi said.

In the wake of the government’s apathy, so far, more than 50 farmers have lost their lives with some even taking the step of committing suicide due to the government’s neglect, she said.

“But neither the heartless Modi government relented nor the Prime Minister or any other minister uttered a word of consolation till today. I pay my respects to all the deceased farmer brothers and pray to the Lord to give their families the strength to bear this sorrow,” the Congress president said.

“Since independence, this is the first such arrogant government that has come to power in the history of the country that, leave alone people, cannot even see the sufferings and struggles of ‘annadatas’,” she said.

It seems that ensuring profits for a handful of industrialists has become the main agenda of this government, Gandhi alleged.

The Congress has been seeking the repeal of the three new farm laws, alleging that they will ruin farming and the farmers. The Congress is also supporting the farmers’ agitation against the legislations.

After the sixth round of formal negotiations on Wednesday, the government and farm unions reached some common ground to resolve protesting farmers’ concerns over rise in power tariff and penalties for stubble burning, but the two sides remained deadlocked over the main contentious issues of the repeal of three farm laws and a legal guarantee for minimum support price (MSP).

Braving the cold, thousands of farmers, mainly from Punjab and Haryana, are protesting at various borders of the national capital for more than a month against these laws.

The government has presented these laws as major agriculture sector reforms aimed at helping farmers and increasing their income, but the protesting unions fear that the new legislations will leave them at the mercy of big corporates by weakening the MSP and mandi systems. — PTI