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    Farmer Unions raise NIA summons issue at 10th round of talks, stick to demand of complete repeal of three farm laws

  • Date : 20 January, 2021

    The government on Wednesday offered to amend the three contentious farm laws at their 10th round of talks with protesting unions but farmer leaders stuck to their demand for a complete repeal of the Acts and also raised the issue of NIA notices being served to farmers.

     
    As the two sides took a break, where farmer leaders had langar food, unions also alleged that the government was avoiding any discussion on their other key demand for a legal guarantee for Minimum Support Price (MSP) procurement.
     
    The meeting began with the three ministers greeting farmer leaders on the occasion of Gurupurab.
     
    During the break, farmer leader Rakesh Tikait said there was no breakthrough during the first session and union leaders raised the issue of some farmers being harassed with NIA (National Investigation Agency) notices.
     
    The ministers apparently told the unions they will look into the matter.
     
    "The government offered to carry out some amendments, but farmer leaders maintained they do not want anything less than a complete repeal of the laws," Tikait said.
     
    He also said the government appeared to be avoiding any discussion on the issue of MSP.
     
    Union Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar, Railways, Commerce and Food Minister Piyush Goyal and Minister of State for Commerce Som Parkash, who is an MP from Punjab, are holding the talks with the representatives of around 40 farmer unions at the Vigyan Bhawan here.
     
    Before the meeting, the three ministers also met senior BJP leader and Union Home Minister Amit Shah.
     
    The tenth round of talks was initially scheduled on January 19, but later got postponed to Wednesday.
     
    In the last round of talks, the government had asked protesting farmers to prepare a concrete proposal about their objections and suggestions on the three farm laws for further discussion at their next meeting to end the long-running protest.
     
    But, unions stuck to their main demand of a complete repeal of the three Acts.
     
    Thousands of farmers, mainly from Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh, are protesting at various border points of Delhi for over a month now against the three laws.
     
    Farmer groups have alleged these laws will end the mandi and MSP procurement systems and leave the farmers at the mercy of big corporates, even as the government has rejected these apprehensions as misplaced.
     
    On January 11, the Supreme Court had stayed the implementation of the three laws till further orders and appointed a four-member panel to resolve the impasse.
     
    Bhartiya Kisan Union president Bhupinder Singh Mann had recused himself from the committee appointed by the apex court.
     
    Shetkari Sanghatana (Maharashtra) president Anil Ghanwat and agriculture economists Pramod Kumar Joshi and Ashok Gulati are the other three members on the panel.
     
    On Tuesday, the SC panel held its first meeting in the national capital.
     
    Under attack from protesting unions for their "pro-government" public stand on three contentious farm laws, the members of the committee said that they would keep aside their own ideology and views while consulting various stakeholders, even as they indicated a complete repeal won't augur well for much-needed agriculture reforms.
     
    Earlier in the day, a group of farm union leaders met top officials of Delhi, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh police to discuss the route and arrangements for their tractor rally on January 26 to protest against the three farm laws.
     
    But the unions rejected a suggestion by police officers to hold their rally on the Kundli-Manesar-Palwal Expressway instead of Delhi's Outer Ring Road, sources said.
     
    Source: The New Indian Express
 















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