Indian farmers vow to carry on protests despite cold, deaths
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[December 21, 2020]
By Danish Siddiqui and Sunil Kataria
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of
Indian farmers, protesting over agricultural laws that they say threaten
their livelihoods, have vowed to carry on their around-the-clock sit-ins
despite cold weather that has already led to some deaths among them.
Farmers from the northern states of Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh
and the desert state of Rajasthan have camped on key national highways
for weeks demanding a repeal of the laws, withstanding temperatures
dropping to 2-3 degree Celsius (35.6-37.4 Fahrenheit).
The farmers, including a large number of older people, said they would
endure the bitter winter sweeping northern India, including the capital
New Delhi, to force Prime Minister Narendra Modi's administration to
rescind the laws introduced in September.
"It's very difficult to camp out in this weather, but we aren't scared,"
said Balbir Singh, an octogenarian from the Patiala district of Punjab.
"We won't go back until our demands are met. Even if we have to die
here, we will."
Since late November, when thousands of farmers arrived in trucks and
tractors to camp out on the borders of New Delhi, nearly 30 people have
died, several of them as a result of freezing weather, farmers said.
About ten people have been killed in road accidents near the protest
sites, they said.
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Farmers warm themselves on a cold winter morning at the site of a
protest against new farm laws, at Singhu border, near New Delhi,
India, December 21, 2020. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui
"We don't want more people to die in this protest, and I hope Modi
and his government take back the laws soon," Paagh Singh, 76, said,
wrapped in a blue blanket. "It's a democracy, and he (Modi) has to
listen to us."
As temperatures dropped, one of the main protest sites turned into a
sea of small tents and tarpaulin-covered tractor trolleys. But some
demonstrators have to spend the night sleeping in the open air.
"I don't care how cold it gets," said farmer Surminder Singh. "I'm
neither scared of the cold nor of Modi. Our struggle will continue
until the laws are withdrawn."
(Writing by by Mayank Bhardwaj; Editing by Mike Collett-White)
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