City
Epaper

36 farmer leaders head to Delhi venue to hold talks with Centre

By IANS | Updated: December 1, 2020 15:44 IST

New Delhi, Dec 1 Even as thousands of farmers continued to rally on the Delhi borders, their leaders agreed ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Dec 1 Even as thousands of farmers continued to rally on the Delhi borders, their leaders agreed to hold parleys with the Centre regarding their demands here on Tuesday afternoon. A group of 36 farmer leaders was on way to the talks' venue in the central Delhi.

Of the 36 farmer union leaders, 30 hail from Punjab and remaining six owe allegiance to Sanyukt Kishan Morcha and other farmer organisations from Haryana and other places.

The leaders and representatives of farmers' unions decided to accept the central government's invitation to hold talks after a three-hour-long meeting at the Singhu entry point on the Delhi-Ambala route.

The group will reach Vigyan Bhavan for the 3 pm meeting, to discuss with the central government their demands, including rollback of three farm laws enacted in September.

Farmer leader Baldev Singh Sirsa, who was among those proceeding towards Vigyan Bhavan,told : "We have accepted the government's invitation. A group of 36 farmer union leaders, including those from Sanyukt Kisan Morcha, is now heading to the venue. The decision was taken in our meeting."

The farmer leaders held a meeting around 10 am on Tuesday to decide their response to Union Agriculture Minister Narendra Singh Tomar's invitation for talks a day earlier. The meeting concluded at 1 pm.

Before the farmers took the decision to hold talks with the government, a high-level Ministerial committee meeting, chaired by Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, was held at BJP President JP Nadda's residence here. The meeting was also attended by Union Home Minister Amit Shah, the Agriculture Minister, and Consumer Affairs Minister Piyush Goyal.

Thousands of farmers from Punjab, Haryana, and Uttar Pradesh have been protesting at the Delhi borders since November 26.

Currently, these farmers are staying put at Delhi's Singhu, Tikri and Ghazipur borders on the Delhi-Ambala, Delhi-Hisar and Delhi-Ghaziabad routes respectively, demanding repeal of three farm laws enacted in September.

Tomar, in a late Monday evening decision, had invited farmer leaders for talks on their demands on Tuesday. A meeting was earlier scheduled to be held between the two sides on December 3.

( With inputs from IANS )

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

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketIPL 2026, KKR vs RR LIVE Cricket Streaming: When and Where To Watch Kolkata Knight Riders vs Rajasthan Royals Match

Other SportsIPL 2026: Hetmyer, Brijesh come in as RR opt to bat against unchanged KKR

International"State-sponsored mass slavery": East Turkistan Govt in Exile slams China over ongoing Uyghur genocide

PoliticsCongress holds protest against PM Modi's address on Women's Reservation Bill setback in Lok Sabha

Other SportsIPL 2026: A win over CSK could be a turning point for SRH, opines Steyn

Politics Realted Stories

Politics"Tamil Nadu will not be fooled": DMK's Dayanidhi Maran alleges PM Modi turning women's reservation into electoral issue

Politics"Deprived women of rightful share": Piyush Goyal accuses DMK-Congress of blocking Women's Reservation Amendment Bill, expresses "deep agony"

Politics"Will provide integrated boost to design, research and industry": Delhi CM on Semiconductor Policy

Politics"CM hasn't grasped this bill": Tejashwi Yadav hits out at Samrat Choudhary

PoliticsPostal voting for govt staff, police and journalists to conclude today in Thoothukudi ahead of Tamil Nadu polls