The Guardian’s south Asia correspondent and the founder of a sustainable farming movement explain why farmers are so angry

Rachel Humphreys talks to the Guardian’s south Asia correspondent, Hannah Ellis-Petersen, about the farmers’ protests taking place in India. The farmers object vociferously to new laws that constitute the most sweeping reform to agriculture for decades. The government of the prime minister, Narendra Modi, says the laws will bring necessary modernisation and private competition to an ailing sector that has left millions of farmers destitute. Farmers say the laws were passed without consultation and will allow private corporations to control the prices of crops, crush their livelihoods and take away their land.

Rachel also talks to Umendra Dutt who runs the Kheti Virasat mission, a people’s movement for sustainable farming and food safety in the state of Punjab. Umendra feels optimistic about the protests – he believes the government will no longer be able to ignore the issues facing farmers.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

One person reportedly killed as car is driven into crowd in Berlin

Fire service spokesperson says about 30 people have been injured in incident…

‘I wanted my children to grow up here’: how Airbnb is ruining local communities in north Wales

Families in Gwynedd county are being evicted as swathes of property are…

Ministers call for ‘much greater pace’ of UK defence investment

Frontbenchers use social media to put pressure on PM after Commons report…

Rio Olympics chief sentenced to 30 years in prison for buying 2016 votes

Ruling against Carlos Arthur Nuzman becomes public Court heard Lamine and Papa…