Singhu, Tikri borders in Delhi still shut; farmers reluctant to go to Burari : The Tribune India

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Singhu, Tikri borders in Delhi still shut; farmers reluctant to go to Burari

Say it is a strategy to confine them there; say they can sit in protest for six months if their demands are not met



New Delhi, November 28

Traffic movement on both sides at Singhu and Tikri continued to be disrupted for the second day on Saturday as farmers planning to hold protest in Delhi rallied at these interstate borders and were reluctant to move to Burari where they were allowed to move in.

Delhi Traffic Police diverted traffic from Mukarba Chowk and GTK Road to prevent inconvenience to commuters due to rallying farmers, who have been travelling towards Delhi in buses, trucks and tractor-trolleys.

The farmers who had gathered on the Delhi borders were allowed only to move towards Burari ground, that too escorted by police. However, a large number of protesters at Singhu and Tikri asserted that they wished to go either to the Ramlila Maidan or Jantar Mantar in central Delhi to protest.

Police officers, meanwhile, were trying to convince farmers to proceed to the Burari ground but the farmers seemed adamant, fearing that camping at the Burari ground would weaken their agitation against the three central farm laws.

Meanwhile, a section of Delhi-bound farmers who had gone to the Nirankari ground in north Delhi's Burari later returned, saying "it is a strategy to confine us".

"The police are not letting our tractor-trolleys to come out once we enter the ground. We don't want to go there now. We will lay a siege at the border entry/exit point only. We won't go to Burari," said a protesting farmer.

Meanwhile, arrangement of water and other necessities were made for farmers to camp at Burari ground on Friday evening.

Senior police officers were supervising the protest site at Burari even as a constant vigil was on at Singhu and Tikri borders. IANS

Sloganeering by farmers continues at Delhi borders

New Delhi: The Saturday sun rose as farmers at Delhi's Singhu and Tikri borders woke up ready to push through another day of protests, and slogans of "black laws" greeted the chilly morning air.

Amid high security arrangements, the sloganeering continued on both the borders - Singhu and Tikri - with thousands of farmers sticking to their demands seeking rollback of the Centre's three farm laws.

In an unusual sight, the farmers were self-barricading themselves so that peace and harmony could be maintained as the agitations continued. But the road blockade led to problems to commuters as traffic was diverted at various routes heading towards these borders.

Kisan Ekta group members, who were protesting at Tikri border, say they could sit in protest for six months if their demands are not fulfilled.

"We have arrangements for food and other things for the next six months. We can easily sit here in protest for months if our demands are not met," said the group that came from Fatehabad.

Security forces have been kept busy in preparing deployment arrangements with senior officials briefing them how to handle the situation as the agitation entered the weekend after the marches started on Thursday from Punjab, Haryana and four more states.

With the possibility of more farmers approaching the border and trying to enter the national capital, concrete slabs, concertina wires, and trucks filled with sand are still in place.

Edgy policemen fired teargas rounds on Friday to keep huge throngs of agitating farmers at the Singhu and Tikri borders at bay in a day-long face-off.

Later in the evening, the administration finally relented and offered the Nirankari Samagam grounds at Burari in north Delhi to farmer leaders protesting on Singhu border on the Delhi-Chandigarh highway.

A few farmer leaders reached Burari ground late while several stayed back at the barricades.

The Tikri border also witnessed similar clashes the whole day on Friday as farmers were targeted with water cannons by police when they tried to move into the national capital with their trucks and tractors.

The police also blocked farmers’ way through concrete slabs. IANS


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