Ghaziabad: There are no farmers from the Ghazipur border who will go to Delhi “quietly”, leader Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) Rakesh Tikait said here on Wednesday, urging authority to reopen the road near the Site protest for convenience.
The farmer’s leader made a statement on the Ghazipur border as Samyukta Kisan Morcha (SKM), the Umbrella Agency protested the agricultural union, received permission to hold a demonstration at Jantar Mantar near the parliament from Thursday.
However, only a maximum of 200 protesters were allowed until August 9 at the heart of Delhi with severe security deployment in the area in the middle of the ongoing Monsun Parliamentary session.
Tikait said a total of 200 farmers under the SKM will go to Mantar Jantar on the bus as permitted.
“The streets near the protest site that has been closed by the authorities must be reopened to facilitate the problem of the local community.
There are no farmers who will go to Delhi secretly.
We will hold on to the protest that is permitted in Mantar,” he said.
He refers to the main route of the Ghazipur border to Dabur Chowk in the city of Ghaziabad who has been affected because of the protest that began at the Delhi border in November 2020, according to a statement by BKU media responsible for Dharmendra Malik.
Overcoming supporters from the stage, Tikait further said “movements throughout the country” will be held for “farmer revolution” on the withdrawal of three controversial central agricultural laws.
Meanwhile, a group of farmers from Karnataka, led by their leader Chukki Nanjudawamy reached the Ghazipur border on Wednesday to show solidarity with the ongoing movement.
Sincerely paid to two farmers who were Martyred on July 21, 1980 in Karnataka during agitation of farmers in the state, according to the statement.
Hundreds of farmers camped at the Singhu border, Tikri and Ghazipur Delhi since November 2020 with the request that farmers produce trade and trade (promotion and facilitation), 2020, farmer agreements (empowerment and protection) on the guarantee of price and Agricultural Services Act Act, 2020 and essential commodities (Amendment), 2020 rolled back and new laws made to guarantee minimum support prices (MSP) for plants.
However, the government, which has held 11 finals of formal dialogue with protesters, has stated that the law is a pro-farmer.