Chandigarh: Haryana Deputy Chief Minister Dushyant Chautala has written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and urged him to resume talks with the farmers protesting the Centre’s three farm legal guidelines.
Chautala additional mentioned a staff of three to 4 cupboard ministers might restart dialogue with the farmers who’ve been tenting on the Delhi borders for over 100 days.
“I would like to bring to your kind attention that our ‘Annadattas’ are on roads at Delhi border agitating in respect of newly enacted three farm laws of the Central government. It is a matter of concern that such agitation is going on for more than hundred days,” Chautala wrote within the letter.
Chautala mentioned he believes each downside has an answer by means of mutual discussions.
“The earlier dialogue between the central authorities and farmers’ union introduced just a few options to the issues raised by Samyukt Morcha.
“In this regard, a team consisting of three to four senior cabinet ministers may lead the delegation for resuming talks with farmers so as to bring an amicable conclusion in this issue,” he wrote in his letter dated April 15.
The deputy chief minister wrote the letter days after state’s residence minister Anil Vij’s missive to Union Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar, saying talks with peasants needs to be resumed to resolve the difficulty.
Vij had mentioned he was involved as a lot of farmers had been sitting on Haryana’s borders amid a surge in COVID-19 instances within the state.
Thousands of farmers, largely from Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh, have been tenting at three border factors of Delhi — Singhu, Tikri (alongside Haryana), and Ghazipur — demanding a repeal of the three farm legal guidelines enacted by the Centre in September final 12 months.
The Centre says the brand new farm legal guidelines will free farmers from middlemen, giving them extra choices to promote their crops.
The protesting farmers, nevertheless, say the legal guidelines will weaken the minimal help value (MSP) system and depart them on the mercy of huge corporates.Â