Farmers to Stay at Borders Until Government Opens Roads: Sarwan Singh Pandher

“We, the farmers of Punjab and Haryana, will continue to live on the border of Shambau and Shambau. We cannot progress without tractors and trains. “The government allowed us to pass,” Pandel confirmed in an interview with Source.

Punjab Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee Chairman Sarwan Singh Pandher on Monday reiterated that his travel plan to Delhi has not changed. Pandel said the farmers’ group will remain at the Shambhu and Kanauli border until the government reopens the road to Delhi.

“We, the farmers of Punjab and Haryana, will continue to live on the border of Shambau and Shambau. We cannot progress without tractors and trains. “The government allowed us to pass,” Pandel confirmed in an interview with Source.

He asked farmers in other states to join the protest and march to Delhi on March 6 by train, bus or transport.

“We demand that farmers from other states gather in Delhi on March 6 by rail, bus or other means of transport,” the minister added.

Pandher said that the protest will continue to the border region. .

Earlier, on February 29, Haryana police lodged an FIR in connection with the death of young farmer Shubkaran Singh at the Karnauri border.
Samyukta Kisan Morcha (SKM), a Mahapanchayat, MSP In Delhi on March 14 to discuss various issues including legal protection for s, opposition to the Electricity Amendment Bill, debt servicing, pension payment, labor law and other unresolved issues.

Following the call for work stoppage, farmers in Delhi along with tractors, minivans and trucks have camped in various parts of the city limits since February 13. Their demands include a law to guarantee MSP (minimum wage). ) and withdrawal of police cases against farmers when there has been an attack in the past.

In the last meeting, which ended after midnight on February 18, a group of three Union leaders proposed purchasing five crops (mango dal, urad dal, tur dal) comprising maize and cotton from central agencies at MSP. for five years. However, the protesting farmers rejected the offer and returned to the protest site.