New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Tuesday asked Punjab to take a cue from Haryana which offers financial incentives to farmers as a measure to curb stubble burning.
The apex court reasoned with the acts of farmers, who, according to the bench, are being made 'villains'. It maintained that they must have had some reasons for resorting to stubble burning. Stubble burning in Punjab is under the scrutiny of the apex court, as it adds to the toxic air that chokes Delhi and the region around the capital every winter.
A bench comprising justices S K Kaul and Sudhanshu Dhulia was hearing pleas in connection with the severe air pollution in the national capital. The apex court suggested that the Punjab government offer its farmers some incentives to not burn stubble. "They should learn from Haryana regarding incentives given to farmers," the court observed.
Justice Kaul said the state government and the union government must forget the politics in the matter and figure out how to curb stubble burning, and added that if the blame game continues then the land will run dry, and water will disappear, all because minimum support price (MSP).
In the context of MSP, the bench queried the counsel, for the state government and central government, why should anything be taken from the farmers who light the fires?