Farmers victorious but to continue protests until formal repeal; agritech players look at contract losses, higher prices
Farmers celebrate at Singhu border, Delhi after India's Prime Minister announced to repeal three agricultural reform laws that sparked more than a year of protests by farmers across the country on November 19, 2021.
Image: XAVIER GALIANA/AFP via Getty Images
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday morning announced that the three farm laws, which have been a point of contention between the farmers and the Centre for more than a year, will be repealed.
“Despite our best intention to support our farmers, especially the small farmers, we could not take them into confidence. I apologise to our fellow citizens. The Union government has decided to repeal all three farm laws,” Modi said in a televised address to the nation ahead of the elections in states like Uttar Pradesh and Punjab where the protests have been most dominant.
Since September 2020, farmers throughout the country have been protesting the three farm laws—Farmers' Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Act, 2020; (2) Essential Commodities (Amendment) Act 2020; and (3)Farmers (Empowerment and Protection) Agreement on Price Assurance and Farm Services Act, 2020—that they believe would have benefitted private players and adversely impacted their livelihood. In January 2021, the Supreme Court had stayed the implementation of these laws until further orders, to facilitate a process of negotiation between the Centre and the farmers.
The announcement came on the occasion of Guru Purab that marks Sikhism founder Guru Nanak's birth anniversary. “The word going around was that BJP will witness massive electoral losses in UP in the upcoming elections. This announcement on Guru Purab and close to the election is to soften the blow, but even then this was bound to happen—if not today they’d have had to repeal the laws sometime,” says cardiologist Swaiman Singh who has been treating the protesting farmers at the Delhi borders since December 2020. The laws are now set to be repealed in Parliament in the winter session starting November 29.