The farmers' protest, the biggest the country has seen in
recent years, intensified over the last five days. Thousands of farmers have
marched to the national capital, with many more trickling in, threatening to
block five entry points to Delhi. "Delhi Police has strengthened its
presence at various border points in the wake of farmers protest. All internal
(Delhi Police) and outside (paramilitary) forces have been mobilized to the
maximum," a senior police official was quoted as saying by Indian news
website News 18. Last week, hundreds of farmers clashed with police while
trying to enter the capital. The police used tear gas and water cannon to try
and stop protesters while the farmers used tractors to try to clear the
barriers that police had constructed using concrete blocks, shipping
containers, and horizontally parked trucks.
In September, India's parliament passed three controversial
agriculture bills aimed at liberalizing the country's farm sector. They were
subsequently signed into law, sparking farmers' protests across the country.
The government argued that the new laws will give freedom to farmers to sell
their produce outside regulated markets and enter into contracts with buyers at
a pre-agreed price. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) insists that the
laws will fetch better prices and free farmers from traditional middlemen who
dominate the trade. The government hopes that its new policy will double
farmers' income by 2022. Indian farmers have held huge rallies across the
country in the past few years to protest against the government's
"neglect" of the agriculture sector amid increasing privatization.
Once accounting for a third of India's gross domestic product (GDP), the
farming sector now produces only 15% of the country's $2.9 trillion (€2.4
trillion) economy. More than half of India's farmers are reportedly in debt,
with 20,638 committing suicide in 2018 and 2019, according to India's National
Crime Records Bureau.
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