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Government Ready To Stop Implementation Of Agricultural Laws

Government ready to stop implementation of agricultural laws for one and a half year, signs of deadlock break from the proposal.

The Union Government has taken a step further to break the deadlock with farmers sitting in the siege of Delhi for nearly two months against agricultural laws.

The government has proposed to the farmers’ organizations that they will stop the implementation of agrarian reform laws for a year and a half and in the meantime a joint special committee will discuss every demand.

This was a huge proposal and had an immediate impact on the farmers’ organizations. Farmers’ organizations, who have been adamant on the demand for cancellation of the law and also rejected the ban by the Supreme Court, have decided to consider the government’s proposal. His decision will come on Thursday.

The proposal given in the 10th round of talks with the farmers indicated the breakdown of deadlock

It is believed that some farmers are trying to create more pressure, but most organizations have decided to stop the movement. A decision has been taken to hold another round of farmers ‘organizations with the government at Vigyan Bhawan on Friday.

The deadlock seems to be breaking in the 10th round of talks between the farmers’ organizations and the government on Wednesday. After repeated T-breaks in the meeting which lasted for about four hours, it was believed that some decision will come out.

Regarding the proposal put forward by the government in the talks and the attitude of the farmer’s associations, Union Agriculture Minister Narendra Tomar said, “The government is ready to postpone the implementation of the three new laws for a year and a half.” During this, some solution will be found in the talks between the farmers’ organizations and representatives of the government.

The government also proposed to form a joint committee to solve the problem

However, in several rounds of Wednesday’s talks, there was also a lot of hotness. But in the talks, the government was sitting on its mind to find a solution. Tomar said that the government is ready to address every doubt of the agitating peasant leaders.

Agriculture Minister Tomar told the peasant representatives that time is needed to consider various aspects of reform laws and movement. The government is willing to postpone the implementation of the law for a year and a half for this. Negotiations will be taken to find a suitable solution.

Tomorrow will be another round of talks with farmers in Vigyan Bhawan

Farmer representatives took this statement of Tomar seriously during the talks. On the attitude of farmers, the Agriculture Minister said that the talks have moved towards meaningfulness.

Farmers’ organizations will again hold talks with the government on January 22 to withdraw the movement. Farmer unions of Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh have been agitating on the frontier of Delhi for nearly two months on agricultural reforms.

Farmer leader said, talks with other organizations also necessary

Indian Farmers Union (BKU) leaders Jagjit Singh Dallewal and Balbir Singh Rajewal said that whatever decision will be taken in the Thursday meeting of farmers on the government’s proposal will be kept in a meeting with the government on Friday.

Rajewal said that since there are only 40 organizations in a meeting with the government, it is necessary to talk to others as well.

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