Patiala:Asserting that his heart was with the farmers amid the Republic Day celebrations, Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh on Tuesday said the Central government had deliberately kept Punjab out of the high-powered committee initially as they knew that the voices of protest would rise from here.
He declared that "these voices will continue to rise" till the farmers' interests are secured.
Punjab was included in the committee only after he personally wrote to the Centre on the issue, said the Chief Minister, making it clear that neither he nor his government was ever asked or consulted about the 'black' farm laws.
Appealing to the Prime Minister to fulfil the demands of the agitating farmers, who are sitting at Delhi's borders for the past two months, the Chief Minister said the farm laws are "completely wrong as they are against federalism since agriculture is a state subject under Schedule 7 of the Indian constitution".
Unfurling the Tricolour here at Raja Bhalindra Singh sports complex here, the Chief Minister recalled the contribution of Baba Saheb B.R. Ambedkar, who had drafted the constitution which remains the bedrock of the nation's governance till date.
Hoping that the tractor march of the farmers passed off as peacefully as their agitation so far has been, the Chief Minister said: "Old farmers are sitting at the borders of the national capital not for themselves but for their children and the future generations".
Declaring that his government was with the farmers, he said, "be peaceful, and the country is with you". He noted that 122 MPs in the UK had spoken in favour of the farmers and other countries had also supported the protests as the farmers had been peaceful all along.
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Amarinder Singh lamented that he never thought he would see a day when Punjab's farmers, who had made the nation self-sufficient in food by ushering in the Green Revolution and ensured that India never needed to beg for food under America's PL 480, would be forgotten in this manner.
At one time, Punjab farmers were contributing 50 per cent to the food basket, and even now contribute 40 per cent of the total foodgrains, the Chief Minister said, adding that "we can never forget what they have done for our country".
With production now being carried out also in Ganga, Narmada and Kaveri basins, the farmers of Punjab were being sidelined, said the Chief Minister, adding, "God forbid a day will come that Punjab would be needed by the nation again".