30 years after Mahendra Singh Tikait, the founder of Bhartiya Kisan Union, led a massive protest by farmers at the Boat Club, his son is leading another rally against govt's apathy towards farmers.
Business
Standard : Thirty
years after lakhs of farmers led by Mahendra Singh Tikait occupied
the lawns of the Boat Club for several days, farmers led by his sons
have rattled New Delhi once again. But this time around, the farmers
have not been allowed to enter the capital.
Thousands
of protesting farmers from north India, under the banner of the
Bhartiya Kisan Union, began the Kisan
Kranti Yatra on September 23 from Haridwar. On Tuesday, when they
reached the border of Delhi, as was their plan, the police stood in
their path with barricades, water cannons, tear gas, and lathis. The
farmers had planned to reach Kisan ghat, conclude their protest and
hand over their memorandum of demands to representatives of the
government.
They
were told by the police that they would not be allowed to enter
Delhi. When the farmers insisted that they be allowed to proceed to
Kisan ghat, the police launched a brutal attack. The farmers were
lathi charged and tear gas shells were lobbed. Several farmers were
injured grievously in the police action.
The
police have claimed that it was because the protestors turned
violent. “Some protestors resorted to stone pelting and wielded
batons causing injuries to police personnel deployed on duty. Under
these circumstances, only minimum required force was used to contain
these aggressive and violent protestors,” the police said.
The
BKU has denied this. “We only insisted that we be allowed to go to
Kisan ghat. We had been marching peacefully for the last ten days.
Why will we resort to violence now at the last step? We never want
any confrontation. Tell me this, we are farmers and we are making
some demands of our government. If our government won’t listen to
us, where should we go? Should we go to Pakistan or Bangladesh?”
Mahendra Singh Tikait’s son Naresh Tikait asked. Tikait is the
president of the BKU, and chaudhary (leader) of the Balyan khap,
which is influential in western UP.
The
police action was widely criticised by the political class, from even
within the NDA camp. From the opposition, Mayawati, Akhilesh Yadav,
Rahul Gandhi and Arvind Kejriwal issued statements in support of the
farmers and criticised the BJP at the Centre for the police action.
Mayawati
said, “This is the height of the BJP government’s anarchy and it
shall remain prepared to bear its consequences.”
“On
International Day of Non-Violence, the BJP’s two-year Gandhi
Jayanti celebrations began with the brutal beating of farmers
peacefully coming to Delhi. Now, the farmers cannot even air the
grievances coming to the capital,” Rahul Gandhi said in a tweet.
A
delegation of BJP leaders led by home minister Rajnath Singh met the
farmer leaders and assured them that all the demands will be
considered. However, the BKU has rejected the government’s
assurances....Read
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