Chandigarh: The Punjab council issued a resolution against three central agricultural laws during a special session on Thursday, accusing the center of pride in bulldozing the road through parliament.
After the Minister of Agriculture Punjab Randeep Singh Nabha moved the resolution, there was a debate about various agricultural problems regarding the state, including the procurement of rice and deficiency of DAP fertilizer.
Talking about the resolution, the PPCC head Navjot Singh Sidhu took a sad, allegating that the foundation for the three agricultural laws was placed at that time Minister of Parkash Singh Badal by notifying contract agriculture, 2013.
He demanded the elimination of the “Anti -Pengahan” ACT passed During the SAD-BJP government office.
After the leader opposed the allegations of Harp Singh Cheema that Finance Minister Manpreet Singh Badal, who attended the meeting of the Central High-powered Committee on Agriculture, did not disclose the center intention to the agricultural law to the public, which last supplyed a few minutes from the minutes of the meeting for the former.
Manpreet said he would resign if he did not raise his voice for punjab farmers in the meeting, or Cheema had to resign.
Manpreet is supported by Sidhu, which says everything is in the note and he will also resign if ManPreet proved wrong.
Sidhu also questioned Mla Aap, allegating that the Delhi government had told one of the agricultural laws and still had not disabled it.
This is the second resolution adopted by the Punjab Assembly of three agricultural laws.
The first was passed in October last year, when Amarinder Singh was the main minister.
New resolution was added, “The naked reading of this law shows this to be published very well supporting the company and harming the interests of small and marginal farmers.” It accused the center of trying to demolish systematically from Mandis Friendly Friendly (APMC).
The house demanded the enactment of the Special Act in Parliament to protect the interests of marginal and small farmers to save them from their exploitation that would soon occur by corporate sharks, during the harvest season, can get products at lower prices from MSP, save and sell to consumers at higher prices.