New Delhi, Feb 16, 2024: Police fired tear gas to disperse the protesting farmers at the Punjab-Haryana border on Friday. Visuals from Shambhu border showed farmers running away to escape the tear gas shells being fired at them.
Meanwhile, a 63-year-old farmer who was protesting at the Shambhu border died of a heart attack.
The farmers’ protest entered its fourth day today and several unions have also called for a ’Bharat Bandh’ from 6 am to 4 pm. The protesting farmers will be participating in a massive ’chakka jam’ across major Indian roads from 12 pm to 4 pm.
Large gatherings have been banned in Delhi and the national capital region (NCR) as Section 144 has been imposed. Traffic was affected in the national capital’s Gazipur border after the police placed barricades in view of the farmers’ protest.
Farmers have vowed to intensify the stir, with the Noida-based Bharatiya Kisan Parishad extending support to the nationwide strike.
Earlier on Thursday, a five-hour marathon talk between leaders of protesting farmers’ unions and three Union ministers saw no breakthrough. The farmers remained steadfast in their main demands, which included a legal guarantee for the MSP of their agricultural produce amongst others.
Here are the latest developments of Bharat Bandh
1. Haryana Police fired several rounds of tear gas shells at the protesting farmers at Shambhu border. A video from PTI news agency showed hundreds of farmers fleeing as tear gas shells landed near them.
2. A 63-year-old farmer who was part of the protest died of a heart attack on Friday, reported PTI news agency quoting officials. From Shambhu border, Gian Singh was taken to the Civil Hospital in Punjab’s Rajpura after he complained of chest pain in the morning.
From there, he was rushed to Rajindra Hospital in Patiala, where doctors declared him brought dead. Singh hailed from Punjab’s Gurdaspur district and had come to the Shambhu border two days ago to participate in the farmers’ ’Delhi Chalo’ march.
3. Farmer leader Jagjit Singh Dallewal told India Today that paramilitary forces deployed at the Delhi, Punjab and Haryana borders are "provoking" them. "We are not Pakistani," he added, following talks with the Centre on Thursday. He also said that the farmers hope there is a solution and their stir will intensify, stressing they still "plan to go to Delhi".
4. Punjab Chief Minister and AAP leader Bhagwant Mann expressed solidarity with the protesting farmers, and criticised the use of drones and putting up of barbed fences on the state’s borders with Haryana. He also criticised the snapping of internet services in three Haryana districts.
5. The Centre and farmer unions held the third round of talks on Thursday. According to the sources, the farmers stressed that an MSP guarantee law has been pending for the past two years. The farmers also asked the government to give them an MSP guarantee for their crops until a law was implemented as per recommendations of late agricultural scientist MS Swaminathan.
6. Farmers from Punjab started their march to the national capital on February 13, but were stopped by security personnel at the Shambhu and Khanauri borders between the state and Haryana. The protesting farmers have been camping at these border points since then. Protesting farmers from Uttar Pradesh and Haryana also began their march to Delhi on Tuesday and have met with heavy security curbs.
7. Tear gas shells and water cannons were used on protesting farmers by Haryana Police at the Shambhu and Khanauri borders on February 13.Farmers, primarily from Punjab, had clashed with Haryana Police at both the border points as they attempted to break the barricades to continue their march to Delhi.
8. Traffic has been hit severely amid the farmers’ stir in Delhi-NCR. The Gautam Buddh Nagar Police on Thursday said restrictions under CrPC Section 144, including a ban on unauthorised public assemblies, have been imposed across the district in view of the Bharat Bandh.
9. Delhi Traffic Police have issued an advisory amid the farmers’ protest, detailing several alternative routes for commuters to take. Police have urged citizens to take metro services to avoid inconvenience as heavy security has been deployed at Delhi’s borders amid farmers’ protest.
10. Delhi Police has also imposed Section 144 CrPc across the national capital until March 12 in view of the farmers’ protest. Entry of tractors into the national capital, carrying guns and inflammable substances as well as makeshift weapons such as bricks and stones, and the collection of petrol cans are also prohibited. Loudspeakers are also banned during this period.
11. After their talks with the Centre on Thursday, farmer leader Jagjit Singh Dallewal told reporters that the Union ministers assured the restoration of several social media accounts of farmer union leaders allegedly suspended amid the protest.
12. The Bharatiya Kisan Union (Ekta Ugrahan) and the BKU Dakaunda (Dhaner) gave the ’rail roko’ (stop the trains) call in retaliation for the use of tear gas shells and water cannons on protesting farmers by Haryana Police. Meanwhile, on the call of SKM, farmers also staged demonstrations at many toll plazas in Punjab. They also forced toll authorities to let go of commuters without charging them a toll fee.
Courtesy: India Today