This Article is From Nov 22, 2021

"Ceasefire By Them, Not Us": Farmer Leader Rakesh Tikait On Agitation

Bhartiya Kisan Union (BKU) leader Rakesh Tikait on Monday said Prime Minister Narendra Modi should give a clear answer on the demand for a law guaranteeing Minimum Support Price (MSP).

'Ceasefire By Them, Not Us': Farmer Leader Rakesh Tikait On Agitation

Rakesh Tikait accusing the government of trying to divide the farmers.

Lucknow:

Bhartiya Kisan Union (BKU) leader Rakesh Tikait on Monday hit out at the government, accusing it of trying to divide the farmers, and said it should talk to them to resolve their issues or else "we are not going away".

The farmer leader also said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi should give a clear answer on the demand for a law guaranteeing Minimum Support Price (MSP) that he had "supported" when he was the chief minister.

"It took one year for us to make them understand. We said our things in our own language but those sitting in shining bungalows in Delhi had another language," Mr Tikait said, addressing a mahapanchayat called by the Samyukta Kisan Morcha (SKM).

"They understood in one year that these laws are harmful and took the laws back. They did the right thing by withdrawing the laws but tried to divide farmers by saying that they failed to make some people understand the laws. We are some people," Mr Tikait said.

He was referring to Prime Minister Modi's apology while announcing the decision on Friday to withdraw the three central farm laws against which the Samyukta Kisan Morcha was agitating.

Mr Tikait said that a "sangharsh-vishram" (ceasefire) has been declared by the government and not farmers and that there are many issues before the peasants.

"The struggle will continue. The government should talk to farmers about the issues related to them or else we are not going to go away. Meetings will be held all over the country and we will tell the people about your work," he said.

Talks between the government and the agitating unions over the three farm laws were stalled in January after nearly a dozen rounds of discussions failed to break the deadlock.

Urging people to join the farmers' movement, Mr Tikait said, "They will entangle you all in Hindu-Muslim, Hindu-Sikh and Jinnah and will keep selling the country."

Despite the climbdown by the government, farmer unions said on Sunday they will continue their agitation till it starts talks with them on their six other demands, including a law guaranteeing MSP and the arrest of Union Minister Ajay Mishra.

Mr Tikait said farmers will not get the right rate of their produce by apology but by framing a policy and contested the claim that a committee has been made for MSP.

He claimed that as chief minister of Gujarat, PM Modi was part of a committee that had suggested to the then prime minister Manmohan Singh that a law guaranteeing MSP was required.

"The report of this committee is lying in the PMO. There is no new committee required nor the country has more time," Mr Tikait said.

"Give a clear answer, the prime minister will have to give a clear answer before the country whether he will accept the suggestion of the committee he was a part of for MSP guarantee law," he said.

He also attacked the media saying that since the past three days they have only been questioning the farmers.

"We have many issues including the one related to the farmers who lost their lives during the agitation," he said.

Among the demands made by SKM are, withdrawal of cases against farmers, building a memorial for the protesters who lost their lives during the agitation and withdrawal of the Electricity Amendment Bill.

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