Police fire tear gas on Indian farmers marching to capital, government offers talks

Farmers take cover behind concrete road dividers as police fire teargas to disperse farmers marching towards India's capital during a protest demanding minimum crop prices near the Haryana-Punjab state border at Shambhu in Patiala district on February 21, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 21 February 2024
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Police fire tear gas on Indian farmers marching to capital, government offers talks

  • On Monday, farmers rejected government proposal for five-year contracts and guaranteed support prices for produce
  • Punjab farmers form an influential bloc of voters PM Modi cannot afford to anger ahead of general elections due by May

SHAMBHU: Indian police fired tear gas on Wednesday to scatter thousands of protesting farmers as they sought to resume a march to Delhi after rejecting a government offer on prices for their produce, while authorities offered a fresh round of negotiations.
Fleeing the stinging gas and clouds of smoke, the farmers, some wearing medical masks, ran into the fields surrounding their gathering-point on a highway about 200 km (125 miles) north of New Delhi.
The police action came as the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi made a new offer to resume talks on the farmers’ demands. Agriculture Minister Arjun Munda urged the farmers to resolve their grievances through the talks.
“After the fourth round, the government is ready to discuss all the issues” such as guaranteed prices for the farmers’ crops, he posted on social network X, as the march resumed.
“I again invite the farmer leaders for discussion. It is important for us to maintain peace.”
Farmers’ leaders went into a huddle to discuss Wednesday’s offer after the police action brought the march to a halt, media said.
Top police and district officials were at the site, mediating between the leaders and the government, the Indian Express newspaper reported.
On Monday, the farmers’ groups had rejected the government’s previous proposal for five-year contracts and guaranteed support prices for produce such as corn, cotton and pulses.
The farmers, mostly from the northern state of Punjab, have been demanding higher prices backed by law for their crops. They form an influential bloc of voters Prime Minister Narendra Modi cannot afford to anger ahead of general elections due by May.
STICKS, STONES, GAS MASKS
The farmers, accompanied by cranes and excavators, began marching at 0530 GMT from the spot where authorities had stopped them by erecting barricades on the border of Punjab state with Haryana, blocking a key highway.
“It is not right that such massive barricades have been placed to stop us,” said one of the farmers’ leaders, Jagjit Singh Dallewal. “We want to march to Delhi peacefully. If not, they should accede to our demands.”
Police in riot gear lined both sides of the highway as the farmers, gathering earlier amid morning fog, waved colorful flags emblazoned with the symbols of their unions, while loudspeakers urged them to fight for their rights.
Television images showed some wearing gas masks.
Late on Tuesday, Haryana police’s chief ordered the immediate seizure of the heavy equipment brought by the farmers, to keep protesters from using it to destroy barricades.
Police also asked owners of such equipment not to lend or rent it to protesters, as its use to harm security forces would be a criminal offense.
About 10,000 people had gathered on Wednesday, along with 1,200 tractors and wagons at Shambhu on the state border, police in Haryana posted on X, warning against the risk of stone-throwing as they were armed with sticks and stones.
Security was also stepped up at entry points to New Delhi, with police in riot gear manning barricades topped with barbed wire in some places, slowing traffic entering the city of more than 20 million and causing snarls.
Two key entry points north of the city have been shut for days and traffic diverted.
Sunday’s government proposal of minimum support prices to farmers who diversify their crops to grow cotton, pigeon peas, black matpe, red lentils and corn was rejected by the protesters, who wanted additional foodgrains covered.
Similar protests two years ago, when farmers camped for two months at the border of New Delhi, forced Modi’s government to repeal a set of farm laws.


India says key Maoist guerrilla surrenders as net tightens

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India says key Maoist guerrilla surrenders as net tightens

NEW DELHI: Indian government officials have said the surrender of a senior Maoist guerrilla commander heralds the “final phase” to end the decades-long Maoist insurgency.
New Delhi has launched an all-out campaign against the insurgents, also known as Naxalites after the village in the Himalayan foothills where the Maoist-inspired insurgency began nearly six decades ago, and vowed to end the rebellion by the end of March.
Maoist commander Thippiri Tirupati, also known as Devji, had been active for years in Chattisgarh state.
“This is the final phase,” Chattisgarh Deputy Chief Minister Vijay Sharma said in a statement posted on social media late Sunday.
“It marks a powerful step toward the complete eradication of armed Naxalism.”
The Naxalite rebellion once held sway across nearly a third of the country, with an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 fighters at its peak in the mid-2000s, but it has been dramatically weakened in recent years.
More than 10,000 people have died in the insurgency.
The Maoists say they are fighting for the rights of marginalized indigenous people in forest regions, where mining companies also eye valuable resources.
Since 2024, more than 500 Maoist rebels have been killed, including some of the top commanders, according to government figures.
Home Minister Amit Shah has repeatedly vowed to crush the rebels.
On Saturday, he said India was “poised to end Maoism” by a long-promised deadline of March 31.
“February is coming to an end, and I repeat what I have said before: by March 31, we will have completely freed this country from the Maoist problem, and Maoism will be totally eradicated,” Shah said in a speech.
“I can’t even imagine that such a massive historic task, such a severe and arduous undertaking, has been successfully completed within just a three-year span,” he added.