Protesting Indian farmers call for 2nd strike in a week
Tens of thousands of protesting Indian farmers
called for a national farmers' strike on Monday, the second in a week, to press
for the quashing of three new laws on agricultural reform that they say will
drive down crop prices and devastate their earnings.
The farmers are camping along at least five major
highways on the outskirts of New Delhi and have said they won’t leave until the
government rolls back what they call the “black laws.” They have blockaded
highways leading to the capital for three weeks, and several rounds of talks
with the government have failed to produce any breakthroughs.
Scores of farmer leaders also conducted a token hunger
strike on Monday at the protest sites. Heavy contingents of police in riot gear
patrolled the areas where the farmers have been camping.
Protest leaders have rejected the government’s offer
to amend some contentious provisions of the new farm laws, which deregulate
crop pricing, and have stuck to their demand for total repeal.
At Singhu, a protest site on the outskirts of New
Delhi, hundreds of farmers blocked all entry and exit routes and chanted
anti-government slogans. Some of them carried banners reading “No farmers, no
food.”
About two dozen leaders held a daylong hunger strike
at the site, while a huge communal kitchen served food for the other
protesters.
“It’s the government’s responsibility to provide
social benefits (to people.) And if they don’t give those, then people will
have to come together" to protest, said Harvinder Kaur, a government
employee who came from her home in Punjab state to help at the kitchen.
Another protester, Rajdeep Singh, a 20-year-old
student who helps his farming family back home in Punjab, said the protest
would continue until their demands are met.
“Now it’s their (government’s) ego and the question
of our pride,” he said.
Farmer leaders have threatened to intensify their
actions and have threatened to block trains in the coming days if the
government doesn’t abolish the laws.
The farmers filed a petition with the Supreme Court
on Friday seeking the quashing of the laws, which were passed in September. The
petition was filed by the Bharatiya Kisan Union, or Indian Farmers’ Union, and
its leader, Bhanu Pratap Singh, who argued that the laws were arbitrary because
the government enacted them without proper consultations with stakeholders.
The farmers fear the government will stop buying
grain at minimum guaranteed prices and corporations will then push prices down.
The government says it is willing to pledge that guaranteed prices will
continue.
With nearly 60% of the Indian population depending
on agriculture for their livelihoods, the growing farmer rebellion has rattled
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s administration and its allies.
Modi’s government insists the reforms will benefit
farmers. It says they will allow farmers to market their produce and boost
production through private investment.
Farmers have been protesting the laws for nearly two
months in Punjab and Haryana states. The situation escalated three weeks ago
when tens of thousands marched to New Delhi, where they clashed with police.



