March 8, 2021
1 min read

Priyanka: Will fight for farmers till last breath

Speaking at a ‘Kisan Maha Panchayat’ here, she urged farmers to hold protests like the one at Delhi border in every village….reports Asian Lite News

Congress General Secretary Priyanka Gandhi Vadra has said that she will continue to fight for the farmers till her last breath, whether it is 100 days or 100 years.

Speaking at a ‘Kisan Maha Panchayat’ here, she urged farmers to hold protests like the one at Delhi border in every village.

“You will find the Congress standing with you everywhere. Whenever you are in trouble, we will be there beside you. Your fight is our fight, and I will be with you till my last breath,” she said.

Priyanka said that the three farm laws were a betrayal of the farmers. The laws were made without even consulting the biggest stakeholders who are farmers.

Also read:‘New farm bills to benefit small and marginal farmers’

“For over 100 days, farmers are sitting on the borders of Delhi, but the government is not concerned. The government, in fact, is being run by the friends of the Prime Minister,” she added.

The Congress leader also expressed concern over the delay in payment of cane dues and said, “The government has money to buy two aircrafts but not pay the dues of cane farmers. When my brother Rahul Gandhi observed a two-minute silence in Parliament in respect of farmers who have died during the agitation, not a single member of the ruling party stood up. Is this not an insult to farmers? Calling them ‘andolanjivi’ and ‘parjivi’ is also insulting for farmers.”

Priyanka Gandhi arrived at the venue on a tractor and was greeted by farmers who cheered the leader.

The Congress General Secretary has been addressing a series of ‘kisan panchayats’ across Uttar Pradesh and the party is hoping to revive itself in Uttar Pradesh through this strategy.

Also read:INDIA = World’s Pharmacy

Previous Story

After pull out, China talks peace

Next Story

How yoga helps pregnancy?

Latest from India News

7/7 London & 12/3 Bombay – Tale of Two Cities

The 7/7 bombings changed London forever. The Victorian-era Tube system still struggles with outages and emergencies. A minor fire or power failure still sends people scrambling in fear.  I saw the same

England Stay Hopeful

With 536 runs still needed and seven wickets in hand, Trescothick acknowledged the difficulty of the challenge but refused to rule out any possibility. England assistant coach Marcus Trescothick admitted that chasing

BRICS must break the digital chains

BRICS nations need to build consensus, balance innovation and social justice by reinforcing the digital sovereignty of Global South, including evenly distribution of benefits through AI, writes Baidya Bikash Basu BRICS, the

Modi begins landmark Argentina visit

First Indian PM to visit in 57 years; economic ties, lithium and trade top agenda Prime Minister Narendra Modi kicked off a historic visit to Argentina on Saturday by paying homage to
Go toTop