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FIELD NOTES

The Caravan

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February 2021

Dispatches from the farmer protests

- AMANDEEP SANDHU

FIELD NOTES

ON NEW YEAR’S EVE, the wind on the Ghazipur flyover, on National Highway 24, was cold and harsh, and the temperature was creeping towards zero. A quiet stage stood on one side of the flyover. Three historical figures kept watch from larger-than-life posters next to the stage: the farmer leaders Chowdhary Charan Singh and Mahender Singh Tikait, and the socialist freedom fighter Bhagat Singh.

Surrounding them lay their followers: thousands of farmers from western Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand, blocking a major road into Delhi to protest farm laws recently enacted by the Narendra Modi government. The layout of their camps—a patchwork of plastic, polyester and tarpaulin tents—mirrored the geography of the places they called home. Farmers from the flat-lands of western Uttar Pradesh spread out on the level ground below the flyover; those from the terai, or foothills, were on the slip roads; and the ones from hilly Uttarakhand perched atop the flyover.

The farmers had faced various hurdles just to get here, to the border of the national capital. Mukhtiar Singh, a middle-aged Sikh farmer from Rajpur, a village in the Baheri tehsil, told me that the Uttar Pradesh government was trying to stop farmers from coming to Delhi. According to him, the deputy inspector general of police had visited the local thana and held a meeting with police officers. Then, the head of his local gurudwara, Niranjan Singh, who is a member of the ruling Bhartiya Janata Party, had personally asked Mukhtiar to stay home, in a meeting at the gurudwara. Mukhtiar recalled that Niranjan told him to “be his guest, not go to the protests.” Mukhtiar refused.

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