City
Epaper

Farmers in Punjab's Bathinda burn stubble, say not left with any other choice

By ANI | Updated: October 14, 2021 05:55 IST

Farmers in Punjab's Bathinda have started burning stubble, saying that they are not being provided with a 50 per cent subsidy as directed by the state government in September.

Open in App

Farmers in Punjab's Bathinda have started burning stubble, saying that they are not being provided with a 50 per cent subsidy as directed by the state government in September.

Speaking toon Wednesday, Ram Singh, a farmer said, "We were not left with any choice rather than burning stubble because the state government has not provided us 50 per cent subsidy announced in September. We have spent around Rs 5,000-6,000 for burning this stubble on our own and the Punjab government has not given any compensation."

Singh further said that the time for sowing winter crops has come, so they must burn this stubble.

Speaking about increasing air pollution, Singh said, "Many places are very polluted. Vehicles, factories and other things also increase air pollution. No one is saying about those things, then why are we being blamed for spreading air pollution?"

"We also have family who can also get affected by air pollution. But we do not have any other option. And burning this much stubble burning is the only cause of increasing pollution," he added.

Another farmer, Ravinder Singh said that if the government will take any legal action against them, then they will remind them about its compensation announced earlier.

Earlier in September, the Punjab government had taken innovative steps to tackle stubble burning which causes air pollution.

Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal has repeatedly blamed stubble burning in the states of Punjab and Haryana for the air pollution in the national capital.

In September this year, the Centre has released Rs 496 crore to subsidize machinery required in-situ management of crop residue with an aim to address air pollution in Delhi and the National Capital Region (NCR) due to stubble burning in the adjoining states of Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh.

Sanjay Agarwal, Secretary of Union Ministry of Agriculture had informed that the Centre released Rs 496 crore for Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, and Punjab to subsidise machinery required in-situ management of crop residue during 2021-22.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: United StatesUnion ministry of agriculturedelhiNCRRam SinghRavinder Singh`delhiDelhi capitalSouth delhi district administrationIto delhiGhaziabad district administration
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalDelhi Shocker: Dispute Between Neighbours Turns Violent in Sultanpuri; Police Rule Out Communal Angle

NationalThree, Including Driver, Apprehended Over Security Breach at Delhi Assembly

NationalSecurity Breach at Delhi Assembly; Unidentified Car Storms Into Premises, Ink Hurled at Speaker’s Vehicle

NationalDelhi Bomb Threat: DU Colleges Receive Threatening Mails, Police Launch Massive Search

MaharashtraRift Within NCP? DY CM Sunetra Pawar’s Solo Delhi Visit Sparks Political Buzz; Parth Pawar Calls Reports ‘Baseless’

National Realted Stories

NationalRajasthan HC stays bailable warrant against Salman Khan

NationalGoa Legislative Assembly to host CPA India Region Zone-VII conference

NationalBengal: Murshidabad key for Trinamool despite voter roll deletions

NationalRahul Gandhi slams Assam CM over remarks against Kharge

NationalVice President confers degrees to over 3.24 lakh learners at IGNOU's 39th Convocation