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11th round of Centre-farmers' talks begin

IANS | January 22, 2021 03:35 PM

NEW DELHI: The 11th round of talks between the protesting farmer unions and three Union Ministers got underway here on Friday to break the over-a-month long deadlock on the new agricultural laws.

Union Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar, Railways, Commerce and Food Minister Piyush Goyal and Minister of State for Commerce Som Parkash, are holding the talks with the representatives of 41 farmer unions at the Vigyan Bhawan here.

The Centre on Wednesday proposed to suspend the agricultural laws for one and half years and set up a joint panel to discuss the Acts to end the stalemate.

The farmers, who have threatened to march to Delhi on Republic Day (January 26) if the laws are not scrapped, have been camping on the outskirts of Delhi in protest against the laws.

Harinder Singh Lakhowal, General Secretary of Bharatiya Kisan Union (Lakhowal group), told IANS that even in this discussion the protesting unions would demand repealing the new laws and provide a legal backing to the minimum support price (MSP).

He said that the farmers on the sit-in protest have rejected the Central government's proposal to stay the implementation of the new farm laws.

They do not approve the proposal and therefore want all three laws to be repealed, Harinder Singh added.

Gurmeet Singh of Ropar in Punjab, who was among the protestors at the Singhu border, said that the farmers' movement would continue till all the three farm laws are withdrawn. Farmers have been sitting for nearly two months at the Singhu, Tikri and the Ghazipur borders located in New Delhi.

Asked if the farming work is not being affected by the farmer agitation, Gurmeet Singh said no work of the farmers has been halted. Farming and agriculture work is being done on time and while he is sitting on a dharna (protest), his son is handling all the farming.

The previous rounds of talks between the government and farmers have failed to reach any concrete results, as protesting unions have stuck to their main demand for repealing the new farm laws, but the government has refused to do so.

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