Tag: Farmers Protest

  • Rajasthan: Police use mild force against protesting farmers in Hanumangarh

    By PTI

    JAIPUR: Mild force was used to push back the farmers who allegedly tried to enter the Hanumangarh collectorate during a protest, demanding procurement of rice on the minimum support price.

    The farmers tried to enter the collectorate to press for their demands but the entry gate was closed by police.

    Some of the farmers jumped the gate and entered the premises, prompting them to use mild force, police said.

    “The farmers were trying to enter the premises forcibly. Therefore, they were pushed back,” Circle Officer Prashant Kaushik said.

    After the incident, the farmers started protesting outside the collectorate.

    “The farmers were demanding the procurement of rice on the minimum support price (MSP). They were peaceful but police used force against them,” said Raghuveer Singh Verma, a member the Sanyukt Kisan Morcha’s Hanumangarh district committee.

    He said that the dharna of the farmers will continue till their demands are met.

  • Farmers not involved in Lakhimpur violence, people from political parties behind it: Bharatiya Kisan Sangh

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Seeking the harshest punishment for those involved in the violence in Lakhimpur Kheri in Uttar Pradesh, the RSS-affiliated farmer union BKS on Monday said people from various political parties, and not farmers, were behind it.

    Describing the incident as “unfortunate”, the Bharatiya Kisan Sangh (BKS) in a statement said, “The people involved in the incident were not farmers, they belonged to various political parties. The incident was carried out using leftist methods. People were mercilessly beaten to death with sticks, something farmers cannot do.”

    The BKS claimed that the way the people took the law into their own hands and committed murders in public shows that they were part of some professional gangs.

    ALSO READ: BKU chief asks BJP workers not to visit UP’s rural areas as farmers angry

    Seeking the harshest punishment for those involved in such acts, it said that justice should be done to the families of the deceased by conducting an impartial inquiry into this heinous incident at the earliest.

    Eight people were killed — four farmers allegedly run over and four people in a convoy of BJP workers who were lynched — on Sunday as violence erupted during a farmers’ protest in Lakhimpur Kheri district in Uttar Pradesh.

  • Lakhimpur Kheri violence: Sidhu, other Cong leaders hold protest outside Punjab governor’s house

    By PTI

    CHANDIGARH: Punjab Congress president Navjot Singh Sidhu, along with several party MLAs, held a protest outside the Raj Bhavan here on Monday against the Lakhimpur Kheri incident in Uttar Pradesh.

    Sidhu, other Congress legislators including Madan Lal Jalalpur, Gurpreet Singh and several members of the Punjab Youth Congress sat outside the residence of the Governor Banwarilal Purohit and raised slogans against the BJP.

    They demanded the arrest of the son of Union Minister of State for Home Ajay Mishra for his alleged involvement in the Lakhimpur Kheri incident.

    Eight people were killed as violence erupted during a farmers’ protest in Lakhimpur Kheri on Sunday, claiming the lives of both farmers and BJP workers ahead of a visit by Uttar Pradesh Deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya.

    Of the eight dead, four were travelling in cars, apparently a part of a convoy of BJP workers who had come to welcome the minister.

    They were allegedly thrashed to death. The four others were farmers, officials said.

    ALSO READ: Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi on ‘hunger strike’ following detention

    An FIR has been registered against Mishra’s son and several others in connection with the violence.

    The protesters also condemned the detention of Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra in Uttar Pradesh and Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar’s remarks allegedly against farmers.

    On Sunday, Khattar talked about “tit for tat” during a meeting of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Kisan Morcha in Chandigarh when he told the gathering to form groups of 500 to 1,000 and be prepared to even go to jail.

    The Chandigarh police detained Sidhu and the other protesters and took them in a bus from outside the Raj Bhawan.

  • CM Channi wants to visit Lakhimpur Kheri, Punjab govt writes to Uttar Pradesh

    By PTI

    CHANDIGARH: The Punjab civil aviation department on Monday urged the Uttar Pradesh government to allow Chief Minister Charanjit Singh Channi’s chopper to land so that he can visit Lakhimpur Kheri, where eight people were killed as violence erupted during a farmers’ protest a day earlier.

    The violence took place on Sunday, claiming the lives of both farmers and BJP workers ahead of a visit to Lakhimpur by Uttar Pradesh Deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya.

    “As you are aware that due to the situation arising out of the incident and deaths of peacefully protesting farmers in Lakhimpur Kheri of Uttar Pradesh, the chief minister wants to visit the families concerned to be with them in this hour of grief,” the director of the Department of Civil Aviation, Punjab, wrote to UP Additional Chief Secretary, Home, Awanish Kumar Awasthi.

    ALSO READ | Lakhimpur violence: FIR against MoS Ajay Mishra’s son, several other persons as Opposition hits out at BJP

    “It is requested that permission may be granted for landing and taking off (of) the chopper of CM. It is also requested that adequate arrangements may be made so that the chief minister may meet with concerned families,” it added.

    Earlier, Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Sukhjinder Singh Randhawa had also said that he would visit Lakhimpur Kheri for an assessment of the situation there.

  • Truce reached between protesting farmers and UP govt, Rs 45 lakh to be given to kin of dead

    Express News Service

    LUCKNOW: The protesting farmers announced an end to their agitation in Lakhimpur Kheri after a truce was struck between them and the police administration following the violence in Lakhimpur Kheri in which eight persons had lost their lives on Sunday.

    As per the Additional Director General (law and order) Prashant Kumar, the state government will give Rs 45 lakh each to the families of four farmers killed in the violence. Moreover, the injured will be given Rs 10 lakh each and the dependants of those killed will be given government jobs.

    The ADG also said that a probe into the violence would be carried out by a retired judge of the High Court and the state government has assured the farmers that the culprits would be arrested within the next eight days.

    After the truce, the protesters agreed for a post-mortem examination of the four farmers who died in Sunday’s violence.  The autopsy would be done by a panel of five doctors and the procedure would be videographed.

    Earlier, politics intensified over the Lakhimpur Kheri violence on Sunday with a number of political leaders, including Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra and Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav, prevented from moving to the trouble torn district by the Yogi Aditynath government  on Monday.

    ALSO READ: Book those involved in death of farmers in Lakhimpur Kheri for murder: Varun Gandhi to Yogi

    Priyanka, who arrived in Lucknow at 8:30 pm on Sunday and tried to proceed to Lakhimpur along with Deependar Hooda in the wee hours on Monday, was detained at Sitapur. She has been taken to the APC guest house. Meanwhile, the state Congress leaders including UPCC chief Ajay Kumar Lallu and MLC Deepak Singh staged a protest at Sitapur demanding the release of the Congress general secretary.

    Similarly, Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav was arrested while sitting on a dharna outside his residence in Lucknow when he was denied permission to proceed to Lakhimpur Kheri on Monday.

    The Samajwadi Party alleged that Akhilesh Yadav was placed under house arrest late on Sunday. However, there was a huge security presence outside the residence of Yadav in Lucknow. Akhilesh was due to travel to Lakhimpur Kheri on Monday. However, after the SP workers agitated over the denial of permission to go to Lakhimpur and indulged in arson, setting a police vehicle on fire in Lucknow, the cops arrested Akhilesh Yadav along with his uncle and Rajya Sabha member Ram Gopal Yadav. Even Shivpal Yadav, chief of Pragatisheel Samajwadi Party – Lohia was detained while travelling to Lakhimpur Kheri.

    In the wake of the protests, the Lucknow administration clamped Section 144 CrPC on Monday. Meanwhile, Additional Chief Secretary, home, Awanish Awasthi wrote to Lucknow Airport authorities asking them not to allow Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel and Punjab Deputy Chief Minister Sukhjinder S Randhawa to land at the airport for their scheduled visit to Lakhimpur Kheri on Monday.

    Awasthi informed the Lucknow Airport authorities that Section 144 had been imposed in Lakhimpur Kheri and “requested them not to allow the arrival of Baghel and Randhawa”.

    Responding to the communication, Baghel tweeted whether civil rights had been suspended in Uttar Pradesh. Baghel asked, “The government of Uttar Pradesh is issuing a decree not to allow me to come to the state. Have civil rights been suspended in Uttar Pradesh? If Section 144 is in Lakhimpur, then why is the state government stopping you from landing in Lucknow?”

    The Uttar Pradesh government has written to the Punjab chief secretary urging the state not to allow anyone to travel to Lakhimpur Kheri.

  • ‘Not as important as those trampled to death’: Priyanka Gandhi on altercation with UP Police 

    Express News Service

    NEW DELHI: Congress leader Priyanka Gandhi Vadra was detained by Uttar Pradesh cops in the early hours of Monday when she was on her way to meet the families of those killed in the violence at Lakhimpur Kheri district on October 3, 2021. 

    Visuals of the Congress leader having an altercation with the deployed cops have gone viral since then. She can be seen asking for an arrest warrant from the police personnel.

    “I am not important than those who were trampled to death. There may not be any law in your state but there are laws in the rest of the country. Show me the warrant or tell me on what basis are you stopping me. If you will make me sit in your vehicle, I will file a case of kidnapping,” she can be heard telling angrily in the videos shared by UP Congress on social media. “You are forcibly taking me. You don’t have the right. If you make me sit in the vehicle, you will be kidnapping me. Arrest me. Your forced ways amount to kidnap, molestation, and I will slap charges under these. I understand everything. Dare if you can to touch me. Go and bring a warrant from your officers and ministers and learn how to speak to women.”

    ALSO READ | Lakhimpur violence: FIR against MoS Ajay Mishra’s son, several other persons as Opposition hits out at BJP

    The Congress leader also alleged that she was manhandled by the cops and made to sit in the vehicle. The police have taken her to the Sitapur police line. 

    Meanwhile, her brother Rahul also extended his support via social media. “Priyanka, I know you won’t hold back. They are stunned by your courage. In this non-violent fight for justice, we will make sure the ‘annadaataas’ of the country are victorious.,” he wrote. 

    The Wayanad MP had also slammed those who were silent on the violence at Lakhimpur Kheri. “The one who turns silent after seeing such an inhuman massacre is already dead. We will not let these sacrifices go in vain; ‘Kisaan satyagraha zindabad,” he wrote.

  • 8 killed in violence at farmers’ protest in UP’s Lakhimpur-Kheri

    Express News Service

    LUCKNOW: At least 8 persons, including four farmers, were killed when a farmers’ protest took a violent turn in Lakhimpur Kheri district, about 130 km from Uttar Pradesh state capital on Sunday.

    Sources claimed that around 15 persons were left injured in the incident.

    “Eight people including four farmers and four occupants of the vehicles which allegedly ran over them, died in the incident today in Uttar Pradesh’s Lakhimpur Kheri,” said Arun Kumar Singh, Additional SP, Lakhimpur Kheri.

    As per the official sources, the protest over the three contentious farm laws turned violent in Tikunia area of Nighasan locality where farmers were opposing the visit of Union Minister of State for Home Ajay Mishra and Deputy Chief Minister Keshav Maurya since Sunday morning.

    Ajay Mishra had organised a programmed at village Banvari in which Deputy CM Keshav Maurya had to take part.

    Farmers unions claimed two of the protestors were allegedly run over by a vehicle in the convoy of the Union minister. They claimed that the vehicle allegedly belonged Mishra’s son.

    Consequently, the infuriated mob of farmers set three jeeps on fire.

    However, reacting to the allegations, Ajay Mishra said that his son was not driving the vehicle that hit the protesting farmers. Mishra said his son was not even present at the spot when the incident took place. He said “anti-social elements” among protesters hurled stones at his vehicle due to which his car overturned and two farmers were crushed underneath. He added that the entire incident was a “conspiracy” and proved that “anti-social elements cloaked themselves as farmers” to create a ruckus at the protest.

    “My son was not even present at the spot… there is video footage of this,” Mishra said while talking to media persons.

    Mishra , in fact, claimed that it was his driver and three other BJP karyakartas who were killed in the incident. He added that his son would cooperate with the police in the investigation.

    Uttar Pradesh chief minister Yogi Adityanath, meanwhile, cancelled all his scheduled programmes in Gorakhpur and returned to Lucknow to take stock of the Lakhimpur Kheri incident.

    The deceased were identified as Harjeet Singh, Satwinder Singh, Satnam Singh and Agyat Lavra. All belonged to towns and villages in Bahraich and Kheri districts.

    The farmers decided to block the Union minister and Deputy CMs visits over Mishra’s recent speech in which he had underplayed the protests, saying it was a protest of “10-15 people and it would take just two minutes to make them fall in line”.

    “The farmers had planned to gherao a helipad to stop the Deputy Chief Minister from getting off. Once that programme ended and most people were on way back, three cars came… and mowed down the farmers… one farmer died on the spot and another in the hospital,” said Dr Darshan Pal, a leader of the farmers’ union.

    ADG, Law and Order, Prashant Kumar has been rushed to Lakhimpur Kheri to take stock of the situation. Additional forces were deployed in the area to prevent any fallout of the situation.

    With tension prevailing in the region, the incident gave ammo to the Opposition to attack the Yogi Adityanath government. Moreover, many including AICC  General  Secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra is likely to visit Lakhimpur Kheri on Monday. Bhartiya Kisan Union spokesman Rakesh Tikait is already on his way.

    Samajwadi Party (SP) President Akhilesh Yadav, strongly condemned the incident and demanded a case of murder be lodged against the Union Minister’s son Ashish Mishra. The SP chief also demanded the resignation of the Chief Minister. A party delegation will visit Lakhimpur Kheri on Monday.

    Earlier in the day, thousands of farmers had gathered at Tikuniya  from adjoining villages like Palia, Bhira, Bijua, Khajuria and Sampurna Nagar with black flags in their hands. Deputy Chief Minister Keshav Prasad Maurya was scheduled to reach Banvir village to attend a programme organised by the Union Minister. However, farmers occupied the helipad site at Maharaja Agrasen Sports Ground, where his helicopter was to land. Following this, Maurya ‘s programme was changed and he reached Lakhimpur by road from Lucknow.

  • Farmers break barricades, face water cannons in Punjab, Haryana during protest

    By PTI

    CHANDIGARH: Farmers broke police barricades and faced water cannons, including near Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar’s house in Karnal, as they laid siege on residences of legislators and ministers in Punjab and Haryana on Saturday to protest the delay in commencement of paddy crop procurement.

    The Centre on Thursday had postponed procurement of kharif paddy in Punjab and Haryana, which usually begins on October 1, to October 11 as the crop maturity is delayed and moisture content in fresh arrival is beyond permissible limits owing to recent heavy rains.

    In Karnal, the Haryana Police used water cannons to disperse protesting farmers after they tried to lay siege on Khattar’s residence, while in Shahabad and Panchkula, the agitators used tractors to break police barricades to reach houses of BJP leaders, including Haryana Minister Sandeep Singh, officials said.

    The situation became tense in a few places in Haryana and Punjab after minor clashes broke out between farmers and police.

    In several places in these states farmers after reaching residences of ministers, legislators and MPs, parked their food grain-laden trolleys in front of their houses.

    While the BJP in alliance with the JJP is in power in Haryana, the Congress is the ruling party in Punjab, and both state governments have urged the Centre to ensure farmers do not face any problem in paddy procurement.

    In Punjab, farmers gathered outside the residences of several Congress legislators, including state assembly Speaker Rana K P Singh in Rupnagar and MLA Harjot Kamal in Moga, and staged protests over the delay in purchase of paddy crop.

    While Punjab Chief Minister Charanjit Singh Channi has urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi to ask government agencies to begin paddy procurement, Khattar along with Haryana Agriculture Minister J P Dalal rushed to Delhi on Saturday to ensure farmers do not face any problems in crop procurement.

    The Samyukt Kisan Morcha (SKM), an umbrella body of farmer unions, on Friday had given a call for holding protests outside the residences of legislators in Punjab and Haryana to register their protest.

    Police said that there was no report of any “major” untoward incident from the two states.

    The procurement operation is undertaken by the central government’s nodal agency Food Corporation of India (FCI) along with state agencies.

    Haryana Minister Anil Vij on Saturday said the farmers’ agitation is getting “violent day by day”.

    “Farmers’ agitation is getting violent day by day. Violent movement in the country of Mahatma Gandhi cannot be allowed,” said Vij in a tweet.

    Police personnel were deployed in strength to maintain law and order, the officials said. Farmers expressed apprehension that they would suffer if their crop is not purchased at the grain markets.

    Paddy crop, though in small quantity, has started arriving in mandis (markets) especially in border areas of Punjab, farmers said.

    They said the farmers who have brought their crop at mandis, will go if their crop is not purchased.

    Some fear that they would be forced to sell crops below the minimum support price to private traders.

  • Farmers hold protests across Punjab, Haryana over delay in paddy procurement

    By PTI

    CHANDIGARH: Farmers in Punjab and Haryana on Saturday held protests at many places against postponing of paddy procurement.

    The Samyukt Kisan Morcha on Friday had given a call for holding protests outside the residences of legislators in both states to register their protest over the delay in purchasing paddy crop.

    The Centre on Thursday postponed procurement of kharif paddy in Punjab and Haryana till October 11 as the crop maturity is delayed and moisture content in fresh arrival is beyond permissible limits owing to recent heavy rains.

    The procurement operation is undertaken by the central government’s nodal agency Food Corporation of India (FCI) along with state agencies. Paddy procurement usually commences from October 1.

    Meanwhile, Haryana minister Anil Vij on Saturday said the farmers’ agitation against the Centre’s new laws is getting “violent day by day”.

    “Farmers’ agitation is getting violent day by day. Violent movement in the country of Mahatma Gandhi cannot be allowed”, said Vij in a tweet.

    Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal urged the Centre to start purchase of paddy crop.

    “The farmers of Punjab are upset, the central government has postponed the purchase of paddy for 10 days, farmer is standing outside the mandis carrying lakhs of quintals of paddy on his tractor,” said Kejriwal in a tweet.

    In Punjab, farmers gathered outside the residences of several Congress legislators, including Punjab Vidhan Sabha Speaker Rana K P Singh in Rupnagar and MLA Harjot Kamal in Moga and staged protests over delay in the purchase of paddy crop.

    Police personnel were deployed in strength to maintain law and order, said officials.

    Farmers expressed apprehension that they would suffer if their crop is not purchased at the grain markets. Paddy crop, though in small quantity, has started arriving in mandis especially in border areas of Punjab, said farmers.

    They questioned where the farmers, who have brought their crop at mandis, will go if their produce is not purchased. Some fear that they would be forced to sell their crop below the minimum support price (MSP) to private traders.

    A farmer in Haryana’s Karnal said his paddy crop will get damaged by October 11 when the Centre would start procuring it. At some places, farmers even handed over memorandum to the Deputy Commissioners demanding commencement of paddy purchase.

    In Haryana’s Ambala, police put up barricades to prevent farmers from laying siege to the residence of BJP legislator Aseem Goel. A fire fighting vehicle and a water cannon vehicle were also deployed outside the residence of the MLA.

    Tight security arrangement has been made outside the residence of Minister Vij at Ambala Cantonment, said officials.

  • PM Narendra Modi slams opposition over farm reforms criticism

    By PTI

    NEW DELHI: Accusing the opposition of “intellectual dishonesty” and “political deceit” over its criticism of his government’s three farm laws, Prime Minister Narendra Modi says tough and big decisions need to be taken to bring benefits to citizens who should have received them decades ago.

    Stoutly defending the agri laws, Modi said it is one thing if a political party makes a promise and is unable to deliver on it but what is a “particularly undesirable” and “detestable” trait is some of these parties made promises on the lines of the reforms enacted by his government and have now done a U-turn and spread “the most malicious kind of misinformation on the promises they themselves had made”.

    In an interview to Open magazine, he said, “The things that people of India are entitled to, those benefits that they should have received decades ago, have still not reached them. India shouldn’t be put in a situation where it has to wait any longer for the things that this country and its citizens are entitled to, we should give it to them.

    “And, for this, big decisions should be taken and if need be, tough decisions should also be taken.”

    He was replying to a question about the labour and farm laws enacted by the government and its refusal to roll-back the three contentious agriculture laws, as demanded by the protesting farmer unions.

    The ruling BJP has said that several opposition parties, including the Congress, had promised similar farm reforms that the Modi government has enacted but are now backing protests against the new laws for selfish political reasons.

    A section of farmers, especially in Punjab and part of Haryana and Uttar Pradesh, have been protesting against the laws, whose implementation have been put on hold.

    The prime minister noted that his government has been saying right from the beginning that it is ready to sit together with the protesting farm bodies and discuss on those issues on which there is a disagreement.

    “Many meetings have also been held in this regard but no one till now has come up with a specific point of disagreement that we want this to be changed,” he said.

    Modi said politics in India had seen only one model, which governments were run to build the next government too, while his fundamental thinking is different as he believes in running the government to build the nation.

    “The tradition has been to run the government to make your party win but my purpose is to run the government in a way to make our country win,” he said.

    Referring to his government’s measures like cooking gas cylinder distribution and building toilets for the poor or push to digital payments, he said many sections of India’s political class view people through the lens of “Raj Shakti” (government’s power) while he sees them as “Jan Shakti” (people’s power).

    The prime minister also asserted that India has done better than many developed countries.

    In an apparent attack on those who have criticised his government’s handling of the Covid pandemic, he said, “However, we have in our midst vested interests whose only aim is to tarnish India’s name. Covid was a global scourge with all countries equally affected. In this scenario, India has done better than its peers and many developed countries, notwithstanding such negative campaigns.”

    The biggest lesson from the Covid fight has been that India has an unparalleled ability to unite, find a common purpose, come together, and a tremendous capacity to deliver when a need arises, he said.

    From being a net importer of personal protective equipment (PPE) kits, India has now become one of the biggest manufacturers across the globe, he said.

    “Imagine if our country had not come up with a vaccine. What would be the situation? We know that a large population of the world doesn’t have access to Covid vaccines. Today, our success in vaccination is thanks to India being Atmanirbhar (self-reliant),” he said.

    On the farm laws, he said his government is committed to empowering the small farmers in every way.

    Slamming rivals, he said, “If you look at those who are opposing the pro-farmer reforms today, you will see the real meaning of intellectual dishonesty and political deceit.

    These were the same people who wrote letters to chief ministers asking them to do the exact same thing that our government has done. These were the same people who wrote in their manifesto that they would enact the same reforms that we have brought.

    “Yet, just because some other political party, blessed by the will of the people, is enacting the same reforms, they have made a complete U-turn and in a brazen display of intellectual dishonesty, completely disregard what will benefit the farmers and only seek what they think will benefit them politically.”