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regular-article-logo Wednesday, 25 December 2024

Rahul counts lives that would have been saved if Modi had spoken to agitating farmers

He was speaking at a corner meeting at Bhastan village in Maharashtra's Buldhana district during his Bharat Jodo Yatra

PTI Buldhana Published 19.11.22, 10:56 PM
Rahul Gandhi

Rahul Gandhi File picture

Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Saturday claimed that had Prime Minister Narendra Modi established dialogue with the farmers who were protesting against the new agriculture laws, "733 lives" would have been saved.

He was speaking at a corner meeting at Bhastan village in Maharashtra's Buldhana district during his Bharat Jodo Yatra.

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Speaking at the end of the day's march, he paid tributes to the farmers who lost their lives while protesting against the farm laws which were withdrawn by the Union government on this day last year.

The Congress observed November 19 as Kisan Vijay Diwas (Farmers' Victory Day).

"Farmers are the voice of this nation. The agriculture laws were anti- farmer and hence they launched an agitation on the outskirts of Delhi, but the Modi government ignored their demands," Gandhi said.

The laws were meant to help a few industrialists, he alleged.

"The government has police, weapons, administration, and the farmers had only their voice. Due to the arrogance of this government, 733 farmers lost their lives during the agitation," the Congress leader said.

The Yatra halted at Bhendval in Jalgaon-Jamod taluka of Buldhana district on Saturday night.

The Congress on Saturday also marked the 105th birth anniversary of former prime minister Indira Gandhi by organising a special 'padyatra' for women along with the Bharat Jodo Yatra which proceeded from Shegaon to Jalamb in the district.

The special march comprised women functionaries of the party and members of self help groups (SHGs), all of whom wore colourful outfits.

Donning a nine-yard saree, Nafisa Siraj, a Congress office-bearer from Nagpur, said, "Hindus and Muslims are not different. By wearing this saree, I wanted to show Maharashtra's culture and tradition." Gandhi's cross-country Bharat Jodo Yatra commenced from Kanyakumari in Tamil Nadu on September 7. PTI MR KRK KRK KRK

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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