Wednesday, June 10, 2026
ADVT 
India

'Will Punish Badals' Vows Amarinder Singh Before 'Kisan Yatra'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Oct, 2016 01:16 PM
    Starting his election campaign, Congress' Punjab chief Amarinder Singh today embarked on a 500 km 'Kisan Bus Yatra' to highlight the BJP-SAD government's "failure in controlling farmer suicides".
     
    In the coming days several senior Congress leaders will join Mr Singh as he travels through the districts of Faridkot, Ludhiana, Bathinda, Muktsar and Ferozepur.
     
    The former Punjab chief minister will hold 'Kisan Sabhas' and 'mandi meetings' where he promised to expose the Badal administration in the state.
     
    Punjab has been facing severe agrarian distress, due to both poor planning and natural factors. Mr Singh promised the widows of farmers who killed themselves that he would "punish" those responsible for ignoring farmer's plight. He also promised to waive off all farmer debts in the state to help them deal with low yields.
     
     
    Among the widows who met Mr Singh before the launch of his road show was Rajomajra's Harbans Kaur - whose husband Sohan Singh committed suicide over a debt of Rs. 4 lakh. The Congress claimed, instead of helping the distressed farmer, the government allowed the installation of an electrical tower in the middle of his farmland, rendering the land useless for cultivation.
     
    "The Badal's are busy filling their coffers with the hard-earned money of the people, and they have no time to even think of their problems," Mr Singh said before the start of his journey.
     
    For the purpose of the roadshow, the Congress has designed a customised bus, with all facilities including a hydraulic platform, from where Mr Singh will address farmers' meetings.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    India's Minister V.K. Singh Triggers New Row, Says Intolerance Debate Paid For

    India's Minister V.K. Singh Triggers New Row, Says Intolerance Debate Paid For
    India's Minister of State for External Affairs V.K. Singh has stirred a new controversy by suggesting that the ongoing debate on tolerance in India was a creation of "imaginative" minds of those "who are paid".

    India's Minister V.K. Singh Triggers New Row, Says Intolerance Debate Paid For

    BJP Elders May Frown, But Narendra Modi Still Has The Upper Hand

    BJP Elders May Frown, But Narendra Modi Still Has The Upper Hand
    The heightened prospects of economic cooperation with Britain are also likely to dispel some of the doom and gloom enveloping the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) after the Bihar debacle.

    BJP Elders May Frown, But Narendra Modi Still Has The Upper Hand

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal 'Very Critical', Say Doctors

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal 'Very Critical', Say Doctors
    Senior VHP leader Ashok Singhal has been admitted to a private hospital in Gurgaon and his condition is "very much critical", a doctor said on Saturday.

    VHP Leader Ashok Singhal 'Very Critical', Say Doctors

    Punjab's Ruling Shiromani Akali Dal Rejects Resolutions Passed By Radicals' 'Sarbat Khalsa'

    Punjab's Ruling Shiromani Akali Dal Rejects Resolutions Passed By Radicals' 'Sarbat Khalsa'
    The gathering was the direct outcome of the conspiracy and complicity of the anti-Panthic Congress party whose leaders gleefully clapped their hands. 

    Punjab's Ruling Shiromani Akali Dal Rejects Resolutions Passed By Radicals' 'Sarbat Khalsa'

    Rajnath Says BJP 'Most Secular Party'

    The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is the country's "most secular party", Home Minister Rajnath Singh said on Tuesday.

    Rajnath Says BJP 'Most Secular Party'

    After Bihar Rout, Advani-Joshi Take On Modi; BJP Welcomes 'guidance'

    After Bihar Rout, Advani-Joshi Take On Modi; BJP Welcomes 'guidance'
    The BJP, in a statement, later said it was "fortunate" to have been led by leaders like Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Advani for decades, and welcomed any guidance and suggestion from the party's "seniors" on victories and defeats.

    After Bihar Rout, Advani-Joshi Take On Modi; BJP Welcomes 'guidance'