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Indian farmers plan nationwide 3-hour blockade of highways

Indian farmers plan nationwide 3-hour blockade of highways

People raise their hands as they attend a Maha Panchayat or grand village council meeting as part of a farmers' protest against farm laws at Bhainswal in Shamli district in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh, India, Feb 5, 2021. (Photo: REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui)

NEW DELHI: Tens of thousands of protesting Indian farmers plan to blockade highways across the country for three hours on Saturday (Feb 6) to press their demands for the repeal of new agricultural laws.

Authorities deployed thousands of security forces mainly outside India’s capital, where farmers have camped at three main sites for more than two months. They say they won’t leave until the government rolls back the laws it says are necessary to modernise Indian agriculture.

READ: Commentary: India has liberalised its farm sector. But not everyone is happy with it

The scheduled highway blockade is set to start at noon local time (2.30pm, Singapore time).

Several rounds of talks between farmers with the government have failed to produce any breakthroughs.

READ: Rihanna tweet on farmer protests gets India incensed

The farmers say the laws will leave them poorer and at the mercy of corporations. Their action is a major challenge to Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

On Friday, Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar defended the laws in Parliament, dampening hopes of a quick settlement as he made no new offer to resume talks with the farmers.

The largely peaceful rally turned violent on Jan 26, India’s Republic Day, when a group of farmers riding tractors veered from the protest route and stormed the 17th century Red Fort. Hundreds of police officers were injured and a protester died. Scores of farmers were also injured but officials have not given their numbers.

READ: Indian journalists accused of sedition over protest reporting

Farmer leaders condemned the violence but said they would not call off the protest.

Since then, authorities have heavily increased security at protest sites outside New Delhi’s border, adding iron spikes and steel barricades to stop the farmers from entering the capital.

Source: AP/kv

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