Historic victory of the Farming Soldiers on Delhi borders

Farmers expressed joy at their victory
By Amarjit Singh Anand

In 2021, The Almighty One manifested a miracle in the form of Victory for the farmers, when the Indian establishment revoked the 3 black laws.

All Prophets, Seers, Saints have advised humanity to live in peace and harmony, by refraining from indulgence in tyranny. This agitation had attained such expansive support from all quarters because it is being conducted on the basis of principles, preached and practiced by Divine Guru Nanak Sahib Jee and his nine illustrious successors, over a period of 239 years from 1469 through 1708.Guru Nanak Sahib says: we, humans are unaware whether we would have adequate time to inhale the next breath. Yet, we continue indulging in self-aggrandizement, totally ignorant about this reality.

“Don’t judge each day by the harvest you reap but by the seeds that you plant”, says Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894).

While the farmers sow seeds in the soil, the ruling elite sowed iron nails on the roads around the nation’s capital. The citizens of Delhi, including the intelligentsia, students, lawyers, homemaker women, shop owners, traders all protested in support for farmers, at the famed Jantar Mantar, which happens to be at a stone’s distance from Gurdwara Bangla Sahib, where the eight-year-old Guru Harkrishan Sahib Jee (the 8th Guru Nanak) served patients during an epidemic 355 years ago. The Gurdwara was built at the venue of a bungalow donated by Raja Jai Singh, a Rajput-royal who was a devoted Sikh of the Divine House of Guru Nanak Sahib Jee.

*Contemporary version of slavery*.

When democratically elected governments assume the form of autocratic, dictatorial, totalitarian and tyrannical establishments, then they become more ruthless than invaders and occupant rulers, who arrive from other regions. India had undergone such invasions for over eleven hundred years. Here is a scenario where subjugation is the order of the day, in an undeclared emergency or martial law. Torturous conditions are being heaped upon the peaceful protesting natives, who elected them, instead of fair and just governance based upon the Preamble to the Indian Constitution. The entire system is subverted, to fill the coffers of the chosen corporate elite, at the expense of the farmers. Enactment of the laws was done during the pandemic, when lockdown was made an excuse to avoid convening the Parliamentary session to have a requisite debate and voting in the Lok Sabha (the lower house) and then the mandatory ratification in the Rajya Sabha, the upper house.

Provocative measures to overpower the agitation started with barricades, soon to be followed by water cannons, tear gas shells, baton charge.

There was a suicide by a religious leader. One protestor was hit in the head with a bullet, while driving the tractor. He succumbed, instantaneously, and his tractor overturned.

Internet, water, electricity services were disrupted. Train services were discontinued.  Trenches, nails, barbed wire, iron, steel, concrete were used to build permanent structures as barricades. Police personnel were seen wielding steel rods.

Bullets have been aimed by the British colonial power, at peaceful gatherings as in Jallianwala Bagh, on the 13th of April 1919, in Sri Amritsar Sahib, Punjab, India.

Tiananmen Square, China where thousands of protesters fought back human rights violations.

The farmer’s agitation of 2020 has been, variously, labelled as anti-national and sponsored by Khalistan terrorists and other nations when it had started from Punjab State. Soon after, as it was gathered momentum and support came in thousands from neighboring States, the government dubbed the protest as being ignited by Maoists and Naxalites in India.

During the worst pandemic lockdown, the same people were seen distributing cooked food, medications, and providing shelter and all kinds of assistance to mitigate suffering of humanity, without discrimination, verily in consonance with the Sacred Tenets enunciated by Divine Guru Nanak Sahibji. Several world governments had gratefully acknowledged these humanitarian endeavors. As a mark of honor and gratitude, in some nations, their national flag fluttered alongside the Nishaan Sahib, the saffron colored religious insignia of the Sikh community.

The Red Fort was the scene of some disturbance on the 26th of January 2021, when a small group raised the Nishaan Sahib, without touching the Indian Tricolor national flag. Astonishingly, the small group was able to, rather allowed to go atop the ramparts to unfurl the Nishaan Sahib, in the presence of a massive police and para-military forces. At this juncture, it would be pertinent to make a mention of the fact that the army regiment on 24-hour duty was found missing.  Nishaan Sahib was intentionally described as the flag of Khalistan.

The same Nishaan Sahib is hoisted by the Sikh Regiment of the Indian Army, wherever it is stationed. It was fluttering atop the very same Red Fort, when Victory Day was celebrated in recent years, to rejoice over the conquests over Delhi’s despotic rulers in the bygone era of Mughal rule, before the British colonialists plundered India, in the guise of trading through the East India Company. Allegations and aspersions of funding from neighboring countries, that is being leveled now, were not made when the same people served good during the pandemic, in India and worldwide. Political leaders were not being allowed to make any speech from the rostrum. If and when they visit the various mass gatherings, in areas bordering Delhi, they are asked to sit with the farmers, on the ground, in the audience. In support of the agitation, several opposition parties have boycotted the Presidential-Address, to the joint session of the two houses of Indian Parliament, at the commencement of the budget session.

Why were the Indian farmers protesting? 

This is a highly pertinent question, a really significant query, which is pervading the thought-process of the entire world.

Indian farmers are literally on the road. They should be in their fields, sowing the seeds or irrigating the crops or harvesting the yields, but they have been forced to sit on the roads, bordering Delhi, the nation’s capital, seat of “the powers that be”, in the largest democracy of the world. Before marching upon Delhi’s borders and then camping there, the protestors had been protesting in Punjab, for a couple of months, by blockades of railway tracks and national highways. When their voice went unheard, they moved the epicenter of their agitation, right to Delhi, the heart of their motherland.

The farmers are in a warzone of sorts, battling it out, “with weapons of words and demands”, of course, protesting against their own elected government, demanding their very legitimate fundamental rights, which have been guaranteed in the Indian Constitution, but which are not being implemented and given to the distressed farmers.

Most certainly, they can be awarded the rank of “farming soldiers on the interstate borders of Delhi”. 

However, what started initially as the farmers’ movement, has assumed the form of a people’s protest, with everyone joining the fray. Students and professors, retired defense personnel and bureaucrats, artists and intellectuals, writers and activists, businessmen and traders, workers and transporters, are all standing up, as they realized the impending impact of inflated prices of edibles, upon the entire populace, as the aftermath of the three laws.

All of the happenings are really an unfortunate and unwarranted situation, especially considering the fact that India has a parliamentary form of government, and the following golden words are enshrined in the Preamble to the Constitution: “Sovereign, Socialist, Secular, Democratic Republic”. This is an unusually dark phase in the history of the Indian polity, post 1947 independent India, when the programs, policies, procedures and decisions of the government are being denounced by the people. The earlier such black-period was the Emergency-Era in 1975 to 1977. And so, the protests, around Delhi, have been ongoing for over one hundred days, now, after the current unrest had commenced in November last year, after the Indian government suddenly announced a decision to issue an ordinance in June 2020 thereby totally overhauling the basic structure of the agricultural sector. This has impacted the entire fabric of the Indian people. Ordinances were passed, at the height of the pandemic lockdown, when the Parliament was not in session. The farmers say the new laws are draconian and are absolutely unacceptable to them and must be revoked, with immediate effect. Soon thereafter, the agitation spread like wildfire, across the entire country, with a few hundred organizations joining the protests and these groups represent not only the farmers but all communities.

Quite a few leaders of other nations and celebrities and general masses took to the internet, voicing their support in favor of the rightful demands of the farmers.

Several unions of farmers, in Punjab and Haryana, soon joined the protests at several locations, primarily on the outskirts of Delhi.

The farmers, numbering hundreds of thousands, brought groceries, clothing and other essentials to last a year, if required. The old and the young, children and ladies, everyone joined the protests, in a spirited and motivated way.

The epicenter of this protest is Singhu border, on Grand Trunk Road National Highway, connecting Delhi with Punjab and Haryana. The Tikri border is the second focal point of the protest. This is on the border of Delhi with Rohtak and Bahadurgarh areas in the State of Haryana. The third important point is Ghazipur border of Delhi with the State of Uttar Pradesh.

People’s Power of Peaceful Protest*: An Unprecedented Agitation.

“No farmer, no food” is the slogan emanating from Punjab India, and soon it started resonating well, deeply and absolutely, with the populace of the entire world. Protests, by Indians, were organized worldwide and outside the New York based headquarters of the United Nations Organization, to register a vociferous opposition to the draconian laws, enacted by the autocratic Indian regime, which is also resorting to atrocious measures and machinations to discredit the agitation.Some world leaders and the public of many nations have castigated the highhandedness of the Union government of India.

The farmers had started staging their protest in Punjab, in June 2020. Then, in November 2020, the scene of the agitation moved to Delhi, the capital of India, where they were joined by farmers from all across India. Similar agitations are on-going in various Indian States.

The intelligentsia and the illiterate, the celebrities and the commoners, the affluent and the poverty-stricken, all of whom are lending their vociferous support to the farmers.

Over eight hundred people have succumbed to the extremities of weather. One religious leader and preacher committed suicide, leaving a note that he was sacrificing his life for the cause of the fundamental right to speech and expression, when democratic norms are thrown to the wind, by an autocratic regime. On the 26th of January, the police shot a farmer in the head, while he was riding a tractor, as part of the peaceful rally in Delhi.

The farmers, in India, have been undergoing tumultuous times, on account of the massive upheaval, brought about in their livelihoods. People were appalled at the enactment of the draconian laws, by the Indian government. To add salt to the wounds, subsequent actions have been ongoing, in order to crush and denigrate the peaceful agitation.

On December 4, 2020, a clarion-call was given for a nationwide strike or shutdown. The unity factor amongst the farming community and their supporters became clearly evident, during this momentous event. The farming community constitutes almost sixty percent of India’s population. Various political parties supported the agitation. Labor unionists and business sector, too, came to the forefront of the protest, with the farmers. Although the economy is almost paralyzed, yet the entire country is supporting the farmers.

From Tractor-Trolleys & Tent-Cities to bricked dwellings. 

The agitating farmers started building brick-houses, at Singhu border, right on both sides of the highway, where they have been protesting for over a hundred days. This has been necessitated by the impending scorching heat, in Delhi, where the sheltering weather claims many lives, every year. The farmers have, already, tackled the extremities of freezing climes, since November 2020.

Now, the bedding, clothing and utensils are being moved from the trolleys and tents to the comfort of houses. When they had started camping there, in November, their requirements were different, when they managed to deal with excessive cold, under heated tents. The houses are very much visible and are growing in numbers, along the segment of the Grand Trunk Road, connecting Delhi and Punjab.

The scenario is changing rapidly, as the farmers, gradually graduated from Tractor-Trolleys & makeshift Tent-Cities towards solid bricked dwellings, enabling them to cope with the summer, looming large on the horizon. To build the houses, masons and building materials, from Punjab. Earlier, in December, they had to shift from their roadside agitation positions to tented facilities, when the need arose for the privacy and safety of womenfolk and children, including some infants and toddlers, all of whom started arriving in great numbers, to support the men.

Owing to the magnanimity and sense of purpose, displayed by NGOs and social organizations, tents were installed to provide succor to the farmers and their families. This endeavor of the NGOs and some local residents’ cane as a massive relief to the farmers. The insulated tents proved to be a welcome change, offering protection from chilling winter and rain, especially for the old, some partially handicapped people, ladies and children. Alongside providing physical comfort, this measure yielded emotional, psychological and mental relief, safety and security.

The waterproof tents were set up by NGOs like Khalsa Aid, Hemkunt Foundation and United Sikhs and provided mattresses, blankets and pillows. Khalsa Aid also set up a tented mall, to provide sundry items, all for free. Nearby petrol-pumps (gas-stations) and some hotels provided bathing facilities, clean water for cooking and drinking, and hot-spots to charge mobile phones and laptops.At this juncture, special mention must be made of Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee, who provided a regular supply of ration commodities, tents, geysers and other items of daily use. The farmers kept their luggage in the tents, went out during the day to join fellow protesting fraternity, rested whenever they wanted, in between, and finally had a peaceful nightly sleep.The tented facility proved to be a real boon, especially for the women, who found a great sense of security and privacy, which were not possible while resting in tractor-trolleys. Not to forget the important protection from mosquitoes. And thus, the agitation continued, in full swing, as the motivated farmers were braving the weather, in addition to various impediments created by the government, including disconnection of basic amenities like water, electricity and internet.

The farmers were absolutely resolute in attaining their most cherished and clear objective of getting the farming laws repealed. And, to achieve such gains and results, they are willing to overcome all circumstances and bear the brunt of cruel consequences. The evidence of their bravery was seen in the way they faced the police, who resorted to actions like baton-charge, water-cannons and tear-gas shells.

On the 26th of January 2021, all eyes were glued towards the grand spectacle, to be staged on ‘The Rajpath’ (implying the Pathway to the Seat of Power) in Delhi, where the prowess of the Indian Defense Forces, during the Parade is showcased, in a gesture denoting National Glory & Esteem, while celebrating freedom and also saluting the Warrior-Defenders of the Indian populace and Indian territorial sovereignty. Simultaneously, on the same day, the farmers agitating peacefully, at several locations, on the borders of Delhi, had decided to have their unique Tractor-March, entering the city. For this, they were given an official permission and a definitive route to follow, to which they had expressed compliance.

Going by several accounts, it would appear that the so-called chaos and anarchy, on the roads of Delhi, was the direct outcome of an orchestrated plan to destroy the agitation. It could not have been the desire or the design of the farming Unions, as they were well aware that such an act would be detrimental and suicidal, for the image and Power of the People’s Peaceful Protest.

A small group of protestors forced their way, into the historic Red Fort complex,running amuck atop the ramparts, to hoist the ‘Nishaan Sahib’, the Religious-Insignia of the Sikhs, that is visible atop every Gurdwara, around the world.

They hoisted the ‘Nishaan-Sahib’, at the very spot where the Prime Minister of India unfurls the Tricolor National Flag, every year, on the 15th of August, India’s Independence Day. One Tricolor is always fluttering on another pole. Although this flag was untouched, yet the protestors were charged with desecration of the National Flag. The ‘Nishaan-Sahib’ was deliberately labeled as the ‘Flag of Khalistan’ (an alleged separatist militant movement) even though the entire world is aware of the ‘Nishaan-Sahib’ being the Insignia of the 551-year-old religion, which is the 5th largest, in terms of numbers, and whose adherents reside globally.

The farmers, who were staging a peaceful protest, throughout since November 2020, were squarely blamed for this scenario and were charged were framed, accordingly. Some minor skirmishes were branded by the authorities, as a “violent action by the farmer-protestors”.

However, there is immense speculation about the entire episode and several indicators clearly point towards a definitive plan to discredit the agitation. At this juncture, it is worth mentioning how, in the first place, this very small group of protestors could manage to intrude the Fort-arena, right under the nose of the police and para-military forces, especially on a significant occasion,  which is a National Day, the Republic Day of India.

In fact, since India’s independence, from the yoke of British colonialism, in 1947, the national monument has remained under the control of the Indian Army, protected by military guards. After the Army handed over the heritage site to the Archeological Survey of India (ASI) in 2003, the Red Fort has been under the protection of the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) and the Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), which fall directly under the control of the Union government’s Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA). So, the moot query remains “how could and how did a bunch of unarmed folks manage to reach the ramparts of the Red Fort unhindered”?  “Could it be that the security forces actually allowed them in, by extending them the courtesy of a free-passage”?

Another aspect is quite suspect. To begin with, this group was stopped by Delhi Police, at a point on the designated route and was told to follow another route. This diversion took them straight towards Red Fort.

Subsequent upon all such high-voltage drama, the farmers’ Unions washed off their hands, from this specific unruly incident, while continuing with the overall agitation.

Delhi Police initiated a probe into these incidents, while filing first information reports against several protestors.This incident proved to be an utter embarrassment for the farmers’ Unions and hence they had to call off the scheduled protest-march, towards Parliament House, on the 1st of February, the day of the presentation of the union-budget.

Amongst those who have expressed their support for Indian farmers are American pop star Rihanna and Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg.In a tweet to her more than 101 million followers, Rihannawrote: “Why aren’t we talking about this?!”, in reference to a news report about the heavy-handed measures being used against the protesting farmers.Greta wrote: “I still Stand with Farmers and support their peaceful protest. No amount of hate, threats or violations of human rights will ever change that”.Talk show host and actor Lilly Singh tweeted, “Yes! Thank you so much @rihanna. This is a humanity issue! #IStandWithFarmers and this narrative is tired.”Singer Jay Sean wrote on Instagram, “It’s one of the largest protests ever in history and hardly any mainstream coverage. I live in the US, and I’ve barely seen it on the news or mainstream media. I don’t know what needs to be done to raise more awareness and have more eyes on this, but I’ve seen videos that are far too graphic and heartbreaking to post. People that are old enough to be my grandparents being trampled over with no remorse or regard. Pls go to my story where I will post a petition link and something actionable. #istandwithfarmers #farmersprotest.”Vlogger Amanda Cerny posted, “The world is watching. You don’t have to be Indian or Punjabi or South Asian to understand the issue. All you have to do is care about humanity. Always demand freedom of speech, freedom of press, basic human and civil rights-equity and dignity for workers”.Mia Khalifa wrote, “What in the human rights violations is going on?! They cut the internet around New Delhi?! #FarmersProtest.”

Taapsee Pannu said “If one tweet rattles your unity, one joke rattles your faith or one show rattles your religious belief then it’s you who has to work on strengthening your value system not become ‘propaganda teacher’ for others.”Sonakshi Sinha wrote a long post in her Instagram stories, an excerpt of which read, “The voices raised are about the violation of human rights, suppressions of free internet and expression, state propaganda, hate speech and abuse of power. Journalists are being harassed. Internet has been banned. Protesters are being vilified through state and media propaganda. Hate speech (desh ke gaddaro ko, goli maro sardaro ko resurfaced) is flourishing. THAT is the issue that’s taken global centre stage…. While news and media will have you think that these are outside forces trying to control the functioning of our country, you must remember that these are not alien species but fellow humans who are speaking up for the rights of other humans. To re-iterate, news tonight will try to paint a picture that ‘outside forces’ are trying to meddle in the functioning of our country. Please don’t give in to that narrative. It’s human, standing up for other humans. THAT’S the narrative.”

Others, from amongst the Indian filmdom, who shared similar posts include Richa Chadha, Shibani Dandekar, Siddharth, Swara Bhasker, Vir Das, Prakash Raj, Abhay Deol, Onir and Arjun Mathur.Singer-actor DiljitDosanjh, addressing the farmers protesting at Delhi’s Singhu border, said, “It is my humble request to the government to listen to the demands of our farmers. I would also request the national media to show that this is a peaceful protest.

Ugandan climate justice activist Vanessa Nakate also came in support of agitating farmers. Nakate wrote multiple tweets in amplifying the plight of protesting farmers.In one of her tweets, she said: “The people united will never be defeated

Hollywood star John Cusack, who previously voiced support to anti-CAA protestors in February 2020, retweeted a post by Vanessa Nakate, a Ugandan climate activist, reading, “Let us talk about what is happening in India right now

Baljit Singh Padam aka rapper DrZeus retweeted Rihanna’s tweet and wrote that “everyone with sense” across the world are wondering about the lack of spotlight on the protests. “World media needs to wake up. #FarmersProtest,” the Indian-origin British singer said.Kamaljit Singh Jhooti, popularly known by his international stage name Jay Sean, took to Instagram and wrote that despite the farmers agitation being one of the largest protests “ever in history”, there has not been enough mainstream coverage of the event.

American Vice President Kamala Harris’ niece Meena Harris, or climate activist Greta Thunberg — no one was spared by the right-wing trolls. These women have been subjected to slut-shaming and mockery. Their mentions were filled with death threats, abuse, and violent consequences — reiterating, yet again, how internet trolls and misogyny go hand-in-hand.

Meena Harris, author, attorney and fashion entrepreneur, urged the release of Nodeep Kaur, a 24-year-old activist in India who was detained after being accused of assaulting police officers during the protests. Meena Harris, a Harvard and Stanford-educated lawyer, children’s book author and the founder of the Phenomenal Woman Action Campaign — is an outspoken social media presence whose profile has drastically increased in connection with her aunt, Kamala Harris, US V-P. Meena tweeted in support of the release of Nodeep Kaur, the Indian activist.

MPs from many countries supported the farmers. “Violence perpetrated by Indian government against farmers peacefully protesting is appalling,” said Jagmeet Singh Canadian popular politician.  UK Leaders Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi and Preet Kaur Gill from UK, Jagmeet Singh from Canada have come out in support of protesting farmers. The protest by farmers received the support of a number of politicians outside India as well. A number of leaders from United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and the United States expressed their solidarity with farmers and criticized the Modi government’s handling of the protests.

United Kingdom Labour MP from Slough and Shadow Rail Minister Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi tweeted: “It takes a special kind of people to feed those ordered to beat and suppress them. I stand with farmers of the Punjab and other parts of India, including our family and friends, who are peacefully protesting against the encroaching privatization of FarmersBill2020.”Quote tweeting Dhesi, another Labour MP, John McDonnell from Hayes and Harlington, wrote “I agree with TanDhesi. This sort of oppressive behavior against peaceful protesters is unacceptable and tarnishes the reputation of India”.

Labour MP from Birmingham Edgbaston and Shadow Secretary for International Development Preet Kaur Gill tweeted, “Shocking scenes from Delhi. Farmers are peacefully protesting over controversial bills that will impact their livelihoods. Water cannons, and tear gas, are being used to silence them. This is no way to treat citizens who are peacefully protesting over the controversial Farmers Bill in India”.

In Canada, the support has come mainly from the New Democratic Party led by Jagmeet Singh.Leader, New Democratic Party, tweeted:”The violence perpetrated by the Indian govt against farmers peacefully protesting is appalling. I stand in solidarity w/ the farmers from Punjab and across India – and I call on the Indian govt to engage in peaceful dialogue rather than violence.” Jack Harris, MP from St John’s East. Harris tweeted: “We are shocked to see the Indian government’s suppression of farmers protesting new laws which will endanger their livelihood. Instead of using water cannons and tear gas, the Indian government needs to engage in open dialogue with farmers”. Leader of Opposition in the Ontario Assembly, Andrea Horwath tweeted:

“I stand with Farmers in India who are protesting peacefully, as well as their loved ones here in Ontario, who are watching the violent crackdown in horror. Everyone deserves to be able to exercise their democratic rights without fear of state-sanctioned violence.”

Gurratan Singh, who represents Brampton East in the Ontario provincial parliament even spoke about the farmers’ protest in the House.

“Farmers are under attack in India…That’s why I’m asking this house to stand with farmers against these unjust laws by the Indian government”.

Kevin Yarde, Member of provincial parliament from Brampton North tweeted:

“Treatment of Punjab Farmers is terrible. They are protesting bills that will impact the lives of so many. Farmers are the backbone of the Punjab they deserve to be treated with dignity. Indian government needs to engage in dialogue with farmers

MPP from Brampton Centre Sara Singh tweeted: As the granddaughter of a farmer from Punjab, as they fight to protect their livelihoods & protest harmful legislation. These scenes are deeply concerning. Everyone deserves to be able to exercise their democratic rights without fear of state-sanctioned violence.

In Australia, it was Rob Mitchell, Labour MP from McEwen in Victoria, who spoke in the country’s Parliament in support of Punjabi farmers. He said:

“I join many in our community who are disturbed at the treatment of Punjabi farmers in India and those who fear for their safety while peacefully protesting. I urge the Indian government to show restraint while dealing with protesters.”

US Republican Party official Harmeet K Dhillon wrote “As the Punjab-born descendant of farmers, my heart breaks to see Punjabi farmers assaulted for protesting Indian govt’s pro-big-corporation farm bill that will destroy their farms, way of life, and culture. Hear them, meet with them, & compromise, P.M. Modi. And for the peanut gallery, I have relatives who farm the land in Punjab. I’m confident they know what’s best for them and don’t need to be told that by central government bean-counters. At a minimum, in the vaunted democracy of India, they have a right to protest & be heard”.

Really commendable are the initiatives of US Senators Charles Schumer and Robert Menendez writing to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and US Congressman Andrew Garbarino’s letter to Taranjit Singh Sandhu, Indian Ambassador to the U.S. The People’s Power of Peaceful Protest has been reinforced through an unprecedented agitation of such immense magnitude. This was a momentous chapter in the history of protests, worldwide, whereby democratic norms are being re-emphasized by the farming community in India.

(The author is a thinker and writer. He is a regular contributor to The Indian Panorama)  

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