New Delhi: A tractor rally on India's biggest public event, the Republic Day, should not have been allowed in the first place and the authorities should have anticipated that they will not be able to control a crowd of over 50,000 people as tractors will be used as a weapon, said India's former home secretary GK Pillai.
Pillai, who was in charge of India's internal security during Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's tenure, said authorities should not have allowed the protesters to march inside the national capital from their designated protest sites at Delhi border, particularly on Republic Day.
"It was a mistake to have allowed the tractor rally at all. They (authorities) should have anticipated that tractors will be used as a weapon. It should have never been allowed," GK Pillai told the audience in response to a question by ETV Bharat in a programme organised by Mumbai-based fintech firm EPS India.
GK Pillai, who was home secretary from June 2009 to June 2011 and handled the tricky situations like the economic blockade of Manipur by some Naga groups in 2010, says once huge crowd of more than 50,000 people was allowed to assemble then there was no way for the authorities to control them.
"It is much better to tell: 'Look, you stay at your protest site. We will not allow you in on Republic Day under any circumstances'," GK Pillai said.
"There was no way to control them," the veteran civil servant told ETV Bharat.
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A tractor rally organised by some farmer organisations on the country's Republic Day (January 26) turned violent and more than 300 police personnel were injured in the rally.
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Delhi police registered 22 FIRs in connection with the arson in which a 24-year-old youth from Western Uttar Pradesh died after his tractor overturned while breaching a barricade.
The farmers' unions have been agitating at Delhi's borders for the last two months against the three controversial farm laws passed by the Union government in September last year.
The farm laws allow greater market access to farmers as they will be able to enter into contract farming with private companies, and can also sell their produce across the country outside the Mandi system managed by State governments which requires farmers to sell their produce only at a designated Mandi (local bazar).