DM Monitoring
New Delhi: Even as India battles a second and more brutal wave of coronavirus infections, thousands of farmers demanding the repeal of farm laws passed by the government last year remain undeterred and continue their protests on the outskirts of the capital, New Delhi.
Since November, tens of thousands of farmers have been protesting against three new agricultural laws passed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government, which the farmers say will destroy their livelihoods by giving private corporations more control over the sector. On Monday, the protests entered their sixth month.
While Modi claims the new laws will modernise India’s agriculture, multiple rounds of talks held between farmers’ unions from across the country and the government failed to break the deadlock.
Even an escalating COVID-19 crisis, which has seen the world’s most populous nation break records for daily infections and deaths for weeks now, has failed to break the protest by farmers, who hail mainly from the states of Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh in the north.
“These farm laws are a bigger threat to us than corona,” Kittu Maan Singh, a protester at Delhi’s Tikri border with the neighbouring Haryana state, told. Farmers at the border could be seen flouting COVID-19 guidelines by not following physical distancing or wearing face masks.
Singh, who hails from Punjab, has been a part of the protest for months now against what the farmers refer to as “black” laws. “We will survive the COVID-19 situation but if we do not resist the black farm laws brought by the Modi government, our future is doomed,” he said.
“We don’t fear COVID-19 because we have bigger things to worry about,” Singh, who owns a small plot of land, told.
Singh questioned the government’s motives in approving the farm laws when the country was in the middle of a pandemic, without discussing the legislation with the farmers or opposition parties.
“If the government is so much concerned about the pandemic, why did it bring the farm laws in the middle of a pandemic without asking whether or not we want those reforms,” he told.
“Why can’t the government announce it will revoke the laws? We will continue our protest unless this government takes them back and guarantees us a minimum support price for our crops.”
Singh said there has been a drop in the number of protesters at three sites outside New Delhi over the past few weeks. But he attributed that not to the pandemic, but to the wheat harvesting season. Some farmers have even constructed brick houses along the highways, anticipating a long agitation against the government. Dozens of makeshift kitchens continue to serve food and volunteers offer healthcare facilities for free. Inside their tents and tractor trolleys, farmers have installed fans and water coolers to fight India’s notorious heat.
The farmers have refused to vacate the sites unless the government agrees to completely roll back the farm laws and guarantee the continuation of the Minimum Support Price (MSP) system that gives them a minimum sale price for their produce. “It’s worrisome because right now we know that any large social gathering is a cause for concern, be it a political rally, a religious gathering or a protest venue,” public health expert Anant Bhan told.