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Farmers' Protest: Voices From The Ground

A grieving family, the missing women, the aftermath of clashes and the ongoing protests ... stories from Shambhu and Khanauri borders

Photo: Tribhuvan Tiwari; Illustration: Saahil
Presence of Absence: When Shubhkaran Singh, 22, left home to join the protesting farmers, no one knew that he won바카라t be coming back ever again. Singh was killed on February 21 at the Khanauri border during clashes between the police and the farmers. At his home, his grand aunt, who raised him, still feels his presence in his room Photo: Tribhuvan Tiwari; Illustration: Saahil
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On the misty morning of February 21, the protesting farmers were gathered at the Shambhu and Khanauri borders, waiting for the skies to clear and preparing to break through the barricades to march to Delhi. Among them was Shubhkaran Singh, 22, a contractual farmer from Bathinda. He went to an elderly farmer and asked for a glass of water. 바카라Jiththe marange, uththe jitange (I will fight till my last breath),바카라 Singh told the farmer. These were his last words.

A few hours later, Singh was allegedly shot at the back of his head and died on the spot after clashes between police forces and farmers turned violent at Khanauri. Singh바카라s friend called up his family, which lives in Baloh village in Bathinda, about 100 kms from the border, and broke the news to them.

The family is yet to come to terms with the sudden loss. A visit to Singh바카라s home, located at the farthest corner of large swathes of fields, debunks the narrative that the protesting farmers are wealthy. There are those like Singh as well. The house is old. The paint is peeling; there are cracks in the walls. A poster bearing Singh바카라s photo hangs from the outside wall. His childhood friend is staring at the picture. Sitting in the main room are Singh바카라s younger sister, his father, who suffers from a mental illness, his grand-aunt and the newest addition to his family바카라Jimmy, the pet dog. His mother left the house when he was two and he was brought up by his paternal grandparents and then his grand-aunt.

The Singh family recently got home Jimmy, their first pet dog who is as shattered as the family Photo: Tribhuvan Tiwari
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The grand-aunt sits outside Singh바카라s room, inconsolable, looking at her grandson바카라s most valuable possession바카라a seed drill machine painted in green and yellow. Singh was possessive about his tractor that is now parked in the neighbourhood yard. A black flag tied to the smokestack was his way of protesting against the government.

Singh was an unfortunate victim, says his family. There could have been more because the day he died in Khanauri, clashes turned violent at Shambhu border, too. When the protesting farmers were running helter-skelter to escape the tear gas shells fired at them, drones followed them, dropping more shells. But the farmers were prepared. They had excavators and JCB bulldozers with modified cabins, anti-riot shields and gas masks to counter the tear gas shells and pellets fired at them. A fully-geared farmer said: 바카라Once we get the green signal, we will take down the barricade in 10 minutes.바카라 Dozens of sandbags were kept ready to construct makeshift paths to cross the interstate border. But the farmer leaders asked them to be patient.

A day before, on February 20, farmers rejected the Centre바카라s proposal of a five-year contract to buy pulses, maize, and cotton at minimum support price. Following this development, the farmers vowed to go ahead with their 바카라Delhi Chalo바카라 march. 바카라We deserve a blanket legal guarantee of MSP. We have been fighting for these demands for so long. We won바카라t back down now,바카라 said Kartar Singh, 60. He hails from a village at the far end of Firozpur from where the India-Pakistan border can be seen.

바카라It바카라s unfortunate the way the police are treating us here. The security forces at the country바카라s border sometimes share food and exchange a few words with those posted on the other side, but here, they are so brutal. We are citizens of this country and we are the food providers. Is this how they should treat us,바카라 he asked.

Singh바카라s aunt and two sisters have now joined the protests Photo: Tribhuvan Tiwari
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According to Punjab바카라s health department, 177 people have been injured in the farmer protests at Shambhu and Khanauri so far. The actual number could be higher, say farmers. More than 200 people have been injured in Shambhu alone, as per the information gathered from the ground, while another 200 are said to have been injured at Khanauri. Three farmers have died in the protests and as per the Haryana Police at least 12 police personnel have sustained injuries.

A few hundred metres away from the clashes, the other farmers still waited for instructions from their leaders. The overall peace was disrupted occasionally by the tear gas shells bursting down the road. 바카라Why are these kids racing to the barricades?바카라 an elderly farmer asked his friend. 바카라Our leaders have asked us to wait until their negotiations are complete. But these youngsters are full of rage. They must have patience,바카라 he said.

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Despite the clashes, the protesters have stayed put. Makeshift kitchens have been set up between the queues of tractor-trolleys parked on both sides of the National Highway-1 where the farmers have set up langar (community kitchens). Food is provided not only to the protestors but also to the underprivileged people living close by.

바카라We prepare langar every morning to serve everyone without discriminating against anyone,바카라 says Bhupinder Singh, 54, from Gadapur village. 바카라On a daily basis, we make six to seven handis (pots) of rice, along with chai, and on some days, kheer. Women in the nearby villages start their day early and make rotis.바카라

This time, the women are largely missing from the Shambhu border, yet they are making their presence felt. About three kms away from the site, at a gurudwara, 10-15 women gather every day as early as 5 AM to prepare langar. A majority of the langar served at the protest sites comes from the nearby villages. They relentlessly prepare food for 10 to 12 hours. 바카라We do whatever we can from here to help our brothers and children who are sitting at the Shambhu border,바카라 says Surinder Kaur, one of the women preparing langar.

Compared to 2020-21, fewer women have joined the protests this time. When asked the reason, a farmer leader said: 바카라Women from our family are not into farming. They take care of our homes and families.바카라 This is the story of many women farmers in India. According to an Oxfam India report, although about 85 per cent of rural women are involved in agricultural activities, only about 13 per cent of them own land. Most of them are not even recognised as farmers.

All The Smoke: Police and farmers clashed at the Shambhu border on February 21 Photo: Suresh K. Pandey
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Sheltered away under the tarpaulin-covered tractors, a small group of women sit steadfast in their support for the farmers at Shambhu. They have been camping at the site since February 11 and remain determined to continue to fight against all odds. 바카라As women, there are challenges of living under open sky for days. Getting privacy is a challenge,바카라 says Manjeet Kaur, 48.

While the men at the protest turn barrels into geysers for hot water and take baths on the streets, women have to travel long distances to find a secluded space to bathe. 바카라But we have come here leaving our families and children at home to protest. We will stay here and keep fighting just like last time,바카라 she adds.

Sitting on a chatai (mat) in front of a red tractor, Gurudev Singh (74) and Bhajan Singh (70) spend their afternoon reading bits and pieces from newspapers to know more about their protests. With the internet shutdown at the Shambhu border, the two childhood friends bank on these newspapers brought to them by journalists and other people from the cities. They read out: 바카라Andolan ke dagar par kisan바카라 (the agitating farmers). An op-ed piece in a Hindi daily leads them to open up about the declining income of farmers for the past two decades.

바카라If we look at the current situation of farmers, everything seems to be taken on loan바카라including these tractors you see. Half the income we earn goes into repaying loans,바카라 says Gurudev Singh. His friend, Bhajan Singh, adds: 바카라It바카라s not only the government바카라s unpredictable policies and false promises but also the unpredictable weather conditions that have added to our woes.바카라

The other farmers sitting there said that they are struggling to get fair prices for other crops like moong, mustard, masur, sunflower despite an MSP. 바카라Although the government has declared minimum support prices for a few of these crops, they do not buy at these prices,바카라 says Gurudev Singh.

Farmers allege that there바카라s a lack of employment for the youth of Punjab. 바카라They are either forced to go abroad or take up farming unwillingly. The rest do odd jobs like driving,바카라 says Kaka Singh, 60, who sighs at what his grandson, who recently moved to Canada, told him: 바카라Iha tuhadi samasi바카라a hai (This is your problem).바카라

Singh, who hails from Dakaunda village in Patiala, believes that the recent government policies have only been consumer-centric and not farmer-centric.

Responding to the government바카라s unwillingness to guarantee MSP, he says: 바카라MSP will not benefit the big players hence the government does not want it. Farmers have been long used as a tool to control inflation in the country but no one bothers to know what the farmers are actually going through.바카라

In all likelihood, Shubhkaran Singh and his family will be forgotten in a few months, say farmers. The young protester leaves behind a 20-year-old sister, who is yet to complete her education and a loan that has to be repaid. To pay tribute to Singh, his uncle, aunt, father and sisters are now sitting in protest at the Khanauri border. 바카라He was one hard-working lad who always fought for the rights of farmers. He was a part of the 2020-21 protests, too. Who knew this would be his last,바카라 says his uncle Charanjit Singh.

(This appeared in the print as 'Voices From The Ground')

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