Kin of farmers who committed suicide leave for Tikri border
JALANDHAR/BATHINDA: The farm groups’ ‘Dilli Chalo’ protest against the three central farm laws appears to attracting farmers and non-farmers alike in Punjab. It is gathering pace even over 20 days after its start and despite the December chill and some protesters’ deaths. Farm union leaders said they have been going by ‘one person from one family policy’, but people have been flocking to Delhi on their own.
On Tuesday, widows of farmers who committed suicide due to debt or other agriculture-related issues, left for Delhi’s Tikri border to highlight the agrarian crisis, carrying photographs of their deceased family members. They will stay for some days in the pandals of farm organisation BKU (Ekta Ugrahan). District and tehsil units were asked to prepare lists of farm suicide-hit families, asking the families to get ready with details like when the farmer had committed suicide, the reason and way of committing suicide. If debt was the reason, families had been asked to collect details of the debt amount, landholding of the family, and whether the family got any compensation.