Farmers thinning at protest sites
   Date :28-Feb-2021

Farmers _1  H x
 Farmers walking at a protest site during a protest against the new farm laws, at the Delhi-Ghazipur border in New Delhi on Saturday.
(ANI)
 
NEW DELHI :
 
MORE than three months have passed since the farmers agitation began. At present the number of farmers at the Ghazipur Border appears to be thinning, particularly in the last one month. In fact this has been the case at the sites of protest on Delhi’s borders ever since the violence on Republic Day, January 26. At the Ghazipur Border in particular, the numbers have reduced signficantly compared to the same date last month. According to the farmers on the border, the number of agitators at the protest sites keeps changing since the farmers keep coming and going, particularly in the harvest season.
 
When we asked Bharatiya Kisan Union (BKU) media in-charge Dharmendra Malik about the dwindling numbers, he said: “We are organising a rally at Saharanpur on Sunday in which Rakesh Tikait will also participate. That is why most farmers have gone there. Let two panchayats be over, the crowds will again begin arriving to the Ghazipur border. At present, 20-25 tractors are about to reach the Ghazipur border.” Ghazipur Kisan Andolan Committee (KAC) leader Jagtar Singh Bajwa told IANS: “Who says that the crowds have reduced? Please go to the stage and see for yourself. The programme hasn’t yet begun, but there are people sitting there already. Since there is a Mahapanchayat in Baghpat, people from that area have gone there.
 
Farmers are also heading to the Mahapanchayat in Rudrapur two days later.” Farmer leaders may or may not agree, but the empty tents at the Ghazipur Border provide ample testimony to the fact that the number of farmers in the agitation has come down significantly. Although the numbers used to increase on the weekend, but that is not happening any longer. On the other hand, Rakesh Tikait has begun attending Mahapanchayats at other places. Except the days when he is present, neither do the farmers appear too enthusiastic, nor are their numbers high. On Feb 19, a meeting was called by farmer organisations at Ghazipur Border in which district heads from Meerut, Saharanpur and Muradabad had participated. In this meeting, in light of the dwindling numbers, it was decided that the leadership will try and stop this slide and won’t let the movement weaken.