TERMS SAD PROTEST A TOTAL FAILURE & HARSIMRAT’S RESIGNATION FROM UNION CABINET A SHAM SACRIFICE
SAYS HE RESIGNED TWICE FROM PARLIAMENT NOT AS `SACRIFICE’ BUT AS DUTY TOWARDS PUNJAB
Chandigarh, October 2:
Formally launching the Congress signature campaign against the black Farm Laws in the state, Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh on Friday slammed the Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) for their political theatrics over Harsimrat Kaur Badal’s resignation from the Union Cabinet, which they were projecting as a big sacrifice instead of a duty towards Punjab.
Recalling that he himself had resigned from Parliament twice to uphold the interests of the state and its people, the Chief Minister said he had done it out of a sense of duty and never as a sham sacrifice, as had been done by Harsimrat.
Trashing the SAD protest over the Agriculture Laws as a complete failure, Captain Amarinder termed it as an attempt to vitiate the atmosphere of Punjab. “Where were they when the state government moved a resolution in the Vidhan Sabha on August 28 seeking withdrawal of the anti-farmer Ordinances and demanding that the Centre make MSP a statutory right,” he asked.
“Their gimmicks now would not help the Akalis woo the farmers, whose lives they themselves were party to destroying as former allies of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP),” he said, reiterating that his government will challenge the new laws constitutionally. “This is not a political fight about BJP or Congress, but a fight about our Kisani, about Punjab, our vajood (existence),” said the Chief Minister.
The Chief Minister was addressing the state’s Sarpanches virtually, on the sidelines of virtual inauguration of three projects to mark the birth anniversaries of Father of the nation Mahatma Gandhi and Former Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri from the Punjab Civil Secretariat.
Punjab Pradesh Congress Committee (PPCC) president Sunil Jakhar and Punjab Youth Congress (PYC) president Brinder Singh Dhillon were present at the launch of the signature campaign against the farm laws.
Pointing out that despite being just 2 percent of the country’s population, Punjab has fed the entire nation for over six decades, Captain Amarinder said soon after the promulgation of the three Farm Ordinances by the Central Government on June 5, he had written to the Prime Minister to convey his government’s strong reservations and concern. However, the Centre did not address the state’s concerns but went ahead to enact the anti-farmer agricultural laws through brute majority, he added.
Noting that Agriculture is a state subject, the Chief Minister said the Government of India had encroached on the states’ powers with these laws, which would devastate the Farm sector. He reiterated his commitment to the Kisan Unions of full support of the state government in their fight against the draconian laws..