National

Formation Of Panel Not A Solution, Repeal Agriculture Laws: Farm Unions On SC Order

Earlier, the SC indicated that it may form a panel with representatives of the government and farmer unions to resolve the deadlock.

Advertisement

Formation Of Panel Not A Solution, Repeal Agriculture Laws: Farm Unions On SC Order
info_icon

Various farm unions on Wednesday said constituting a new panel to break the stalemate on the three recent agri laws, as indicated by the Supreme Court, is not a solution as they want a complete withdrawal of the legislations. They also said the government should have formed a committee of farmers and others before the laws were enacted by Parliament.

Their assertions came after the Supreme Court indicated earlier in the day that it may form a panel constituting representatives of the government and farmer unions to resolve the deadlock.

Abhimanyu Kohar, a leader of the Rashtriya Kisan Mazdoor Sabha which is one of 40 protesting farmer unions, said they have already rejected a recent government offer to form such a panel.

Advertisement

"Setting up a new committee is not a solution. We just want a complete repeal of the three agriculture laws. Earlier, there have been several rounds of talks between a group of Central ministers and farmer unions, which was like a committee itself," Kohar told PTI.

Taking to Twitter, Swaraj India leader Yogendra Yadav, who is also a member of Sankyukt Kisan Morcha, said, "The SC can and must decide on the constitutionality of the 3 farm acts. But it is not for the judiciary to decide on the feasibility and desirability of these laws. That's between the farmers and their elected leaders. SC monitored negotiation would be a wrong path."

Advertisement

In another tweet, he further said, "This amounts to resurrecting a proposal made by the Govt on 1st December which farmers organisations had rejected unanimously."

The Sankyukt Kisan Morcha is an umbrella body of 40 protesting farmer unions.
Bhartiya Kisan Union (Ekta Ugrahan), which has been leading the agitation at Tikri Border, said that there would be no meaning in setting up a new committee now.

"We will be in the new committee only after the government first repeals the three laws. The government should have formed a committee of farmers and others before enacting the new agriculture laws. There will be no meaning in setting up a new committee at this stage," BKU Ekta Ugrahan's Punjab general secretary Sukhdev Singh said.

However, Bharatiya Kisan Union leader Rakesh Tikait said, "We have only seen media reports about the SC order as of now. We want to first see an authentic copy of the order and then see what the government has to say. Only then can we comment on this."

Earlier in the day, the Supreme Court indicated that it may form a committee with representatives of the government and farmer unions to resolve the deadlock.

The top court was hearing a batch of applications seeking a direction to authorities to immediately remove the farmers from the roads, saying commuters were facing hardships due to the blockades and the gatherings might lead to an increase in the number of Covid19 cases.

Advertisement

"Your negotiations have not worked apparently. It is bound to fail. You are saying you are willing to negotiate," a bench headed by Chief Justice S A Bobde told Solicitor General Tushar Mehta.

Mehta, who is representing the Centre, replied, "Yes, we are willing to talk to farmers."
Thousands of farmers have been camping at the Delhi border for the last 20 days in protest against the three laws that they claim will lead to a dismantling of the mandi system and the Minimum Support Price mechanism, apprehensions that the government has been saying are misplaced.

On Tuesday, the leaders of the agitating farmers had asserted they will “make” the Centre repeal the three new agri laws in a hardening of their stand.

Advertisement

Enacted in September, the three farm laws have been projected by the government as major reforms in the agriculture sector that will remove middlemen and allow farmers to sell their produce anywhere in the country.

Advertisement