Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
India

Repeal of farm laws 'unfortunate', says SC panel member

Darpan News Desk IANS, 19 Nov, 2021 09:04 AM
  • Repeal of farm laws 'unfortunate', says SC panel member

New Delhi, Nov 19 (IANS) Prime Minister Narendra Modi's announcement on Friday to repeal the three farm laws has brought cheers to the agitating farmers' organisations.

However, Anil Ghanwat, a farm leader from Maharashtra who was one of the three members of the Supreme Court appointed committee on farm laws earlier this year, has termed the decision as "unfortunate".

His co-panelist Ashok Gulati had a guarded response, wanting to wait for the committee announced by the Prime Minister for wider consultation.

Coinciding with the auspicious occasion of Guru Nanak Jayanti, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday announced to repeal the three contentious farm laws passed by the Parliament last year, saying the constitutional process to repeal the laws would be taken up in the winter session of the Parliament starting November 29.

Modi also announced to form a committee comprising representatives of the Centre, state governments, farmers, agriculture scientists and agriculture economists to discuss how Minimum Support Price (MSP) can be made more effective, how zero budget farming can be promoted and how crop patterns can be changed in a scientific manner.

Speaking to IANS over phone from Mumbai, Ghanwat, a leader of the Shetkari Sanghatana founded by Sharad Joshi, said, "This is a very unfortunate decision for both the farmers and the country as a whole. These laws were giving at least some freedom to the farmers to market their produce. But with these laws repealed, the old laws would continue, the same laws that have prompted hundreds of farmers to commit suicide, the same laws that prevented better remunerative market for the farmers' produce."

Explaining his point, Ghanwat said that if cotton starts getting good price, the government can put a stock limit using the Essential Commodities Act; or for that matter, can use the Foreign Trade Act to put an export ban, which will bring down cotton price. Same can be done for soyabean and other crops.

Ghanwat also said that he will be reaching Delhi, most likely on Monday, and first meet the other two members of the Supreme Court appointed committee.

"If possible, we would put out the report in the public domain," he said.

His co-panelist Ashok Gulati, however, had a guarded response.

"The Prime Minister has clearly said that the government wanted to do reforms for the betterment of the farmers, but failed to communicate properly to them. The proposed committee will have a wider consultation and hopefully will suggest more meaningful reforms. Let us wait for that," he said.

The Supreme Court had appointed the three-member committee -- the third member being P.K. Joshi -- in January this year while staying the three farm laws.

The committee had submitted its report in March. However, since then neither did the apex court make use of any of its recommendations, nor was the report made public.

In September, Ghanwat had written to the Chief Justice of India to release the report so that its recommendations could be used by the government for resolving the farmers' agitation.

The government had held several rounds of talks with the farmers, but neither side had budged.

MORE India ARTICLES

Anti-BJP Parties Come Together But Unlikely To Form Federal Front

Anti-BJP Parties Come Together But Unlikely To Form Federal Front
he Congress victory in the Hindi heartland in the recent Assembly elections, has come as a dampener for some of the ambitious regional parties who want to have a major say in how the next government is formed.

Anti-BJP Parties Come Together But Unlikely To Form Federal Front

42-Carat Diamond Found In Madhya Pradesh's Panna Sold For Rs. 2.55 Crore

Motilal Prajapati, along with four others, had taken a mine on lease in Krishna Kalyanpur area in Panna and had unearthed the diamond, the biggest found in these parts.  

42-Carat Diamond Found In Madhya Pradesh's Panna Sold For Rs. 2.55 Crore

Indian Army Jawans Rescue 2800 Tourists In Sikkim, Then Vacate Barracks For Them

Indian Army Jawans Rescue 2800 Tourists In Sikkim, Then Vacate Barracks For Them
The tourists, who included many elderly people and children, were provided with shelter and food in army facilities on Friday night.  

Indian Army Jawans Rescue 2800 Tourists In Sikkim, Then Vacate Barracks For Them

Mother Chops Off Newborn Girl’s Extra Fingers, Toes With A Sickle. Baby Dies

The girl, who was born on December 22 with six fingers each on both hands and six toes each on both feet, died due to the injuries, police said.  

Mother Chops Off Newborn Girl’s Extra Fingers, Toes With A Sickle. Baby Dies

Pune Man, 47, Thought He Saw 'Alien Object' Outside His Home, Writes To PM

Probe revealed that the man, who is 47 years old, was suffering from a mental ailment, a police officer said

Pune Man, 47, Thought He Saw 'Alien Object' Outside His Home, Writes To PM

Nawanshahr Cops Clueless On 4 Minors Set To Be Trafficked To US

Other than Jalandhar-based Balraj Singh of KP Tour and Travel company, who maintained that he had  only issued four or five air tickets as instructed by Hoshiarpur-based Tilak Raj for whom he was working, no other agent booked by the CBI could be tracked today.  

Nawanshahr Cops Clueless On 4 Minors Set To Be Trafficked To US