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Protests Staged Outside Government House as Kisaan Tehreek Reaches Jammu Kashmir

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On Saturday, a protest was staged outside the Governor house that demanded new laws must be taken back at an earliest in support of farmers protesting on the borders of Delhi against agricultural laws, in Jammu.

Kishore Kumar, a senior leader of the Kisan Tehreek, during a protest outside the Governor’s House in Jammu said that the Supreme Court had stayed agricultural laws but the government does not act upon it.

He said that the Union government has been discussing its benefits in eight rounds of talks and hasn’t accepted farmers demands.

“Modi government at the Center was constantly cheating the farmers. It had passed anti-farmer bills without telling the truth to the people, but resorting to lies and deception,” Kumar said.

“The government is also cheating the farmers in the name of doubling their income, but farmers know instead of selling the product of the farmers in the markets, the big business will buy it at exorbitant prices,” he said.

Zahoor Ahmed Rather, said that the government intended that the farmers would be tired and would be forced to end the protest. “Supreme Court is not happy with these laws, so it has stayed it. But farmers are objecting to the committee formed by the Supreme Court because we know those who are part of the committee are already supporters of these agricultural laws,” Rather further added.

M. Y Tarigami, senior CPI leader who was also part of the protest said that the government must take back the new agricultural laws at an earliest.

According to him, the laws came to fore without any debate and discussion and farmers were not taken into confidence and if the government wants to save the country, then they must save farmers by taking these black laws back.

Farmers across India have one voice and won’t go back till these laws won’t be rolled back according to Tarigami.

On the Delhi border for the last 60 days, farmers have been against the agricultural laws, during which the government’s talks with farmers have been inconclusive.

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