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What does Modi gain by not REPEALING Farm Laws?

October 04, 2021 07:24 IST

And the only answer one can think of is that this is being done to preserve the image of toughness and 56 inches and all the rest of it, notes Aakar Patel.

IMAGE: Farmers at the Kisan Mahapanchayat against the Centre's farm reform laws, in Muzaffarnagar, September 5, 2021. Photograph: Shahbaz Khan/PTI Photo
 

Why is the protest, which began last year, still continuing? It is instructive to examine the details.

The farmers' movement gave the Union government a set of eight demands.

First, to repeal the law that allowed tax-free trade of agricultural produce outside of regulated mandis, stop corporates from entering the agriculture sector and provide a guarantee for the Minimum Support Price.

Second to repeal the law allowing contract farming.

Third, to repeal the law amending the Essential Commodities Act, decriminalising the hoarding of agricultural produce.

Fourth to withdraw the amendments proposed in the Electricity Ordinance 2020, which would end power subsidies and replace them with a cash subsidy.

Fifth to eliminate the taxes on fuel to align the price of petrol and diesel to international crude prices.

Sixth to repeal the Straw Pollution Ordinance 2020, which criminalises the burning of stubble.

Seventh to stop the Union's legislative encroachment into the domain of states: agriculture is a state subject and not a Union one.

And lastly to unconditionally release those jailed in the Bhima Koregaon case and for the CAA protests.

On December 30 last year, the Modi government agreed to drop the amendments in the Electricity Ordinance (Point 4) and to exempt farmers from the stubble burning penalty (Point 6).

On January 12 this year, the Supreme Court 'stayed' the implementation of the farm laws.

The stay addressed Points 1, 2 and 3.

The court then appointed a four man committee to speak to the farmers and the government and make recommendations.

One of the committee's members, Bhupinder Singh Mann, withdrew himself saying he was in support of the farmers.

The other three included two agricultural economists who had written in support of the government.

The farmers unions refused to meet the committee and it gave its recommendations to the court in a sealed cover six months ago, in March.

A couple of months ago, on July 4, Piyush Goyal's ministry of consumer affairs imposed a limit of 200 tons (wholesale) and 5 tons (retail) on the stocking by traders of all pulses except moong.

This was because prices were rising, but this limit meant that the government was itself going against the repeal of the Essential Commodities Act.

Last month, one of the Supreme Court committee's members expressed his frustration about their report still remaining in its sealed cover.

He also said that the government and the court would have to consider the "law and order situation" which would arise if the report was released.

The committee has apparently not favoured repeal of the laws but, according to this member, Anil Ghanwat, the laws have 'many defects' which need to be addressed.

This then is the situation of the demands for which the farmers are still on protest.

Some of their demands have already been met, some have been stayed and in one case the government, without repealing, has itself undone a key law.

Earlier this year, the government said it was willing to stay the implementation of the laws for 18 months.

So what stops the government from just repealing the laws that are in any case not being implemented?

The laws were passed as ordinances in June, passed off as part of the Atmanirbhar Bharat package, passed in dubious fashion in the Rajya Sabha without a division vote and have seen the biggest and longest mass protest of the world.

Some 600 farmers have already died while on this protest.

There is no group that is demanding the implementation of the laws, this is important to note.

There is no pressure on the government to implement the laws.

It has merely put the laws away in cold storage and is ignoring the protests and hoping that they end from exhaustion or something else on their own, though that does not appear to be happening.

So why is it letting the protests continue instead of just doing what is already obvious and repealing the laws? That is the question.

And the only answer one can think of is that this is being done to preserve the image of toughness and 56 inches and all the rest of it.

One hopes that this is not the reason, because it says something awful about this nation's leadership, but it is difficult to see what else it could be.

Aakar Patel is a columnist and writer and you can read Aakar's earlier columns here.

Feature Presentation: Aslam Hunani/Rediff.com

AAKAR PATEL