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Tuesday, February 20, 2024

Julian Assange: Two-day extradition hearing starts in London

Julian Assange live news: WikiLeaks founder’s bid to avoid US extradition

By Federica Marsi AJ 21 Feb 2024

இலண்டன் நீதிமன்றம் முன் மக்கள் ஆர்ப்பாட்டம்

The judges said they would reserve their decision. It was not immediately clear when the verdict would be announced.
AJ 21-02-2024 17.00 GMT
A recap of today’s events

We will be closing this live page soon. Here’s what happened on the second and final day of the extradition hearing.
  • The US side presented its arguments why the UK High Court should not permit Assange to appeal his extradition from the UK to the US.
  • Lawyers for the US said the WikiLeaks founder should be extradited to face spying charges because he put innocent lives at risk by releasing hundreds of thousands of classified US government documents.
  • They also said Assange could not be “treated as akin to an ordinary journalist or Wikileaks akin to an ordinary publisher”.
  • The 52-year-old’s lawyers had told the court on Tuesday the case was politically motivated, arguing Assange was targeted for his exposure of “state-level crimes”.
  • The judges said they would reserve their decision. It was not immediately clear when the verdict would be announced.
  • Assange was again not in court on Wednesday, nor watching remotely, because of his poor health condition, his lawyers said.
  • WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has made his final legal attempt to prevent his extradition from the United Kingdom to the United States where he is wanted on spying charges.
  • Lawyers for US authorities have told London’s High Court to block Assange’s bid to appeal his extradition on the second and last day of hearings on Wednesday.
  • Assange’s lawyers on Tuesday asked the court to grant him a new appeal, arguing that US authorities are seeking to punish him for exposing serious criminal acts by the US government.
  • If the judges rule against the Australian citizen, he can ask the European Court of Human Rights to block his extradition, but supporters worry he could be sent to the US before that happens.

Sri Lanka sends more workers to Israel

 උපදේශනය තුළ , බලමුලු ගැන්වීමඋග්‍රවන ගාසා ගැටුම මධ්‍යයේ ගොවිපල සේවකයන් ඊශ්‍රායලයට අපනයනය කිරීමට ශ්‍රී ලංකා රජය ගත් තීරණය හෙළා දකිමු

නොවැම්බර් 13, 2023

සංස්කාරක විසිනි


ගොවි කම්කරුවන් 10,000ක් ඊශ්‍රායලයට අපනයනය කිරීමට ශ්‍රී ලංකා රජය මෑතදී ගත් තීරණය සම්බන්ධයෙන් අපගේ දැඩි කනස්සල්ල සහ හෙළා දකිමින් ඉඩම් හා කෘෂිකර්ම ප්‍රතිසංස්කරණ සඳහා වූ ව්‍යාපාරය (MONLAR). ඊශ්‍රායලය සහ ගාසා තීරය අතර ගැටුම උග්‍ර වී ඇති අතර, එහි ප්‍රතිඵලයක් ලෙස කුඩා දරුවන් සහ ළදරුවන් ඇතුළු අහිංසක ජීවිත ඛේදනීය ලෙස විනාශ වී ඇති අවස්ථාවක ගත් මෙම තීරණය දැඩි කනස්සල්ලට කරුණකි.

පලස්තීනයේ සිදුවෙමින් පවතින ගැටුම ජාත්‍යන්තර අවධානය ඉල්ලා සිටින අතර සියලු ඝාතන නැවැත්වීමට සාමය, යුක්තිය සහ ක්ෂණික සටන් විරාමය ප්‍රවර්ධනය කිරීම සඳහා සාමූහික ප්‍රයත්නයක් ඉල්ලා සිටින අතර තුවාල ලැබූ සහ අභ්‍යන්තරව අවතැන් වූ පුද්ගලයින්ට මානුෂීය සහයෝගය ලබා දීමට ඉඩ ලබා දේ. මෙවන් අස්ථාවර තත්ත්වයක් තුළ ශ්‍රී ලාංකික ගොවි කම්කරුවන් ඊශ්‍රායලයට යැවීමට ගත් තීරණය සන්නද්ධ ගැටුම්වලට සම්බන්ධ රටක් සමඟ කම්කරු ගිවිසුම්වලට එළඹීමේ යෝග්‍යතාව පිළිබඳ සදාචාරාත්මක ප්‍රශ්න මතු කරයි.

MONLAR යුක්තිය, මානව හිමිකම් සහ අවදානමට ලක්විය හැකි ජනගහනය ආරක්ෂා කිරීමේ මූලධර්ම දැඩි ලෙස විශ්වාස කරයි. මෙම ගැටුමේදී අපමණ දුක් විඳිමින් සිටින පලස්තීන ජනතාව සමඟ අපගේ සහයෝගිතාව ප්‍රකාශ කරමු. ප්‍රචණ්ඩත්වයෙන් විනාශ වූ කලාපයකට කම්කරුවන් යැවීම ඔවුන්ගේ ආරක්ෂාව අවදානමට ලක් කරනවා පමණක් නොව, හමුදා ගැටුමකට සම්බන්ධ රටක් සමඟ ආර්ථික ක්‍රියාකාරකම්වල යෙදීමේ සදාචාරාත්මක ඇඟවුම් පිළිබඳ කනස්සල්ල ද මතු කරයි.

ගැටුමේ මානුෂීය පැතිකඩ සැලකිල්ලට ගනිමින් සහ පුරවැසියන්ගේ ආරක්ෂාව සහ යහපැවැත්ම සඳහා ප්‍රමුඛත්වය දෙමින් මෙම තීරණය නැවත සලකා බලන ලෙස අපි ශ්‍රී ලංකා රජයෙන් ඉල්ලා සිටිමු. විශේෂයෙන්ම භූ දේශපාලනික ආතතීන් උත්සන්න වන කාලවලදී යුක්තිය, සාමය සහ මානව හිමිකම්වලට ගරු කිරීම යන මූලධර්ම සමඟ අපගේ ක්‍රියා පෙළගැස්වීම අත්‍යවශ්‍ය වේ.

MONLAR විසින් රජයේ තීරණය සම්බන්ධයෙන් පුරවැසියන්, සිවිල් සමාජ සංවිධාන සහ පාර්ශ්වකරුවන්ගේ උත්සුකයන් විසඳීම සඳහා විනිවිද භාවයෙන් යුත් සහ ඇතුළත් සංවාදයක් ඉල්ලා සිටී. මානව හිමිකම් ආරක්ෂා කරන, ගෝලීය සාමයට දායක වන සහ යුක්තිය සහ සහයෝගීතාවයේ වටිනාකම් සමඟ පෙළ ගැසෙන විදේශ ප්‍රතිපත්තියක් පෝෂණය කිරීමේ වැදගත්කම අපි අවධාරණය කරමු.

එබැවින් පලස්තීනයේ පවතින පුළුල් ආචාරධාර්මික සලකා බැලීම් සහ පවතින මානුෂීය අර්බුදය සැලකිල්ලට ගනිමින් සිය තීරණය නැවත සලකා බලන ලෙස MONLAR ශ්‍රී ලංකා රජයෙන් ඉල්ලා සිටී.



காசா மோதல் அதிகரித்து வரும் நிலையில் இஸ்ரேலுக்கு பண்ணை தொழிலாளர்களை ஏற்றுமதி செய்ய இலங்கை அரசாங்கம் எடுத்த தீர்மானத்திற்கு கண்டனம்

நவம்பர் 13, 2023 ஆசிரியர் மூலம் MONLAR

நிலம் மற்றும் விவசாய சீர்திருத்தத்திற்கான இயக்கம் (MONLAR- Movement for National Land and Agricultural Reform), 10,000 பண்ணை தொழிலாளர்களை இஸ்ரேலுக்கு ஏற்றுமதி செய்வதற்கான இலங்கை அரசாங்கத்தின் சமீபத்திய முடிவு குறித்து எங்களின் ஆழ்ந்த கவலையையும் கண்டனத்தையும் வெளிப்படுத்துகிறது. இஸ்ரேலுக்கும் காசாவுக்கும் இடையே மோதல் அதிகரித்து, குழந்தைகள், கைக்குழந்தைகள் உட்பட அப்பாவி உயிர்கள் பரிதாபமாக பலியாகியுள்ள நிலையில் எடுக்கப்பட்ட இந்த முடிவு மிகவும் கவலையளிக்கிறது.

பாலஸ்தீனத்தில் நடந்து வரும் மோதல் சர்வதேச கவனத்தை கோருகிறது மற்றும் அனைத்து கொலைகளையும் நிறுத்த அமைதி, நீதி மற்றும் உடனடி போர் நிறுத்தத்தை மேம்படுத்துவதற்கான கூட்டு முயற்சிக்கு அழைப்பு விடுக்கிறது மற்றும் காயமடைந்த மற்றும் உள்நாட்டில் இடம்பெயர்ந்த மக்களுக்கு மனிதாபிமான ஆதரவை அனுமதித்தது. இத்தகைய கொந்தளிப்பான சூழ்நிலையில், இலங்கை விவசாயத் தொழிலாளர்களை இஸ்ரேலுக்கு அனுப்பும் முடிவு, ஆயுத மோதலில் ஈடுபட்டுள்ள ஒரு நாட்டுடன் தொழிலாளர் ஒப்பந்தங்களில் ஈடுபடுவதன் சரியான தன்மை பற்றிய நெறிமுறை கேள்விகளை எழுப்புகிறது.

MONLAR நீதி, மனித உரிமைகள் மற்றும் பாதிக்கப்படக்கூடிய மக்களின் பாதுகாப்பு ஆகியவற்றின் கொள்கைகளை உறுதியாக நம்புகிறார். இந்த மோதலின் போது பாரிய துன்பங்களை அனுபவித்து வரும் பாலஸ்தீன மக்களுக்கு எமது ஒற்றுமையை தெரிவித்துக் கொள்கிறோம். வன்முறையால் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட பகுதிக்கு தொழிலாளர்களை அனுப்புவது அவர்களின் பாதுகாப்பை ஆபத்தில் ஆழ்த்துவது மட்டுமல்லாமல், இராணுவ மோதலில் ஈடுபட்டுள்ள ஒரு நாட்டுடன் பொருளாதார நடவடிக்கைகளில் ஈடுபடுவதன் நெறிமுறை தாக்கங்கள் பற்றிய கவலையையும் எழுப்புகிறது.

மோதலின் மனிதாபிமான அம்சங்களைக் கருத்தில் கொண்டு, குடிமக்களின் பாதுகாப்பு மற்றும் நல்வாழ்வுக்கு முன்னுரிமை அளித்து, இந்த முடிவை மறுபரிசீலனை செய்யுமாறு இலங்கை அரசாங்கத்தை நாங்கள் வலியுறுத்துகிறோம். நீதி, சமாதானம் மற்றும் மனித உரிமைகளுக்கான மரியாதை போன்ற கொள்கைகளுடன், குறிப்பாக புவிசார் அரசியல் பதட்டங்கள் அதிகரித்துள்ள காலங்களில் நமது செயல்களை சீரமைப்பது அவசியம்.

அரசாங்கத்தின் முடிவு தொடர்பான குடிமக்கள், சிவில் சமூக அமைப்புகள் மற்றும் பங்குதாரர்களின் கவலைகளை நிவர்த்தி செய்ய வெளிப்படையான மற்றும் உள்ளடக்கிய உரையாடலுக்கு MONLAR அழைப்பு விடுக்கிறது. மனித உரிமைகளை நிலைநிறுத்தும், உலகளாவிய அமைதிக்கு பங்களிக்கும் மற்றும் நீதி மற்றும் ஒற்றுமையின் மதிப்புகளுடன் இணைந்த வெளியுறவுக் கொள்கையை வளர்ப்பதன் முக்கியத்துவத்தை நாங்கள் வலியுறுத்துகிறோம்.

எனவே, பரந்த நெறிமுறைக் கருத்தாய்வுகள் மற்றும் பாலஸ்தீனத்தில் நிலவும் மனிதாபிமான நெருக்கடி ஆகியவற்றின் வெளிச்சத்தில் இலங்கை அரசாங்கம் தனது முடிவை மறுபரிசீலனை செய்ய வேண்டும் என்று MONLAR கோருகிறது.⍐

Interview by EAM, Dr. S. Jaishankar to leading German economic daily, Handelsblatt

 

The Global Economic Model Is Unstable and Unjust

Interview by EAM, Dr. S. Jaishankar to leading German 

economic daily, Handelsblatt during his visit for the Munich 

Security Conference

February 20, 2024

The Global Economic Model Is Unstable and Unjust

India’s Foreign Minister speaks on the role of his country in the Ukraine war and the relationship with Russia. He explains what he hopes for from Europe and Germany

CV:
The top Diplomat: Since 2019 the 69-year-old Indian is the Foreign Minister of his country. Behind him is a decades-long diplomatic career. Amongst others, he was Ambassador to the United States, China, and the Czech Republic. He has also worked in the Indian Embassy in Moscow and Jakarta. He is a member of the ruling government party, the BJP.


The Author:
 In 2020, he published his book "The India Way: Strategies for an Uncertain World”. His latest book "Why Bharat matters” on India’s strength is now also out.

Minister Jaishankar, you have just spoken with foreign and defense ministers from all over the world about the threats to the rules-based international order. What is India doing to strengthen it?

The global order is currently facing multiple kinds of stress. Due to shocks like Covid, the war in Ukraine, the war in Gaza, the NATO withdrawal from Afghanistan and disruptive climate events that are happening more and more frequently. That is our challenge. However, it is not just about strengthening the international order, but also about changing this order. Who shapes it and on what basis? The international order must evolve further.

How and in which areas?

Take the United Nations as an important part of the international order. The UN started with 50 members, now it has almost 200 - but the management of the UN has not changed. The group of the world's top 20 or 30 economies has changed a lot in the past two decades. Ten years ago, India was the eleventh largest economy, now we are number five. In a few years, we will be the third largest.

You and others have been calling for reforms at the UN for years. Do you think the current blockade could be resolved?

The countries blocking reform are in denial about the changes that have taken place in recent decades. The real issue is: how do we refresh the international order, how do we renovate and reform it and its institutions? There is no point in saying to international institutions: "Do your job better" if they are not capable of doing so. Look at how the international order simply collapsed during a historically large problem like Covid. Every country acted in its best interest.

There was the UN Covax vaccine campaign…

It was good, there was some collaboration, but most countries didn't help each other. If we are leaving out large parts of the world, we urgently need to change the international order. Even today, many, many countries are angry that they received vaccines so late that they were subject to entry restrictions, that their economic development was seriously undermined.

What exactly do you think should change?

That depends on which area you look at. Climate protection needs to be taken much more seriously. And then you can look at the imbalance in global production.

What do you mean?

We have created an economic model that is unstable and unfair. In the name of globalization, we have seen over-concentration in the world. Production has been shifted to a limited number of countries. The economies of many countries have been hollowed out. They depend on other countries for very basic things - and we notice this immediately when we have disruptions like Covid, like the climate or the problems in the Red Sea at the moment. The problem is so profound that it's not so easy to say: "Let's do these three or four things - and things will be fine again."

Europe's current priority is to push back the Russian troops in Ukraine because they see Vladimir Putin as the biggest threat to the international order. India recently agreed on more arms cooperation with Russia. The country is still the most important arms supplier for you.

In terms of inventory, yes, because many Western countries have long preferred to supply Pakistan and not India. But that has changed in the past ten or fifteen years with the USA, for example, and our new purchases have diversified with the USA, Russia, France and Israel as the main suppliers.

India buys a lot of the Russian oil - in Germany there is criticism that this is detrimental to the effectiveness of the sanctions against Russia. Is the Indo-Russian relationship a burden on the India-Europe relationship?

Everyone conducts a relationship based on their past experiences. If I look at the history of India post-independence, Russia has never hurt our interests. The relations of powers like Europe, the US, China or Japan with Russia, they have all seen ups and downs. We have had a stable and always very friendly relationship with Russia. And our relationship with Russia today is based on this experience. For others, things were different, and conflicts may have shaped the relationship. We, on the other hand, had a politically and militarily much more difficult relationship with China, for example.

Would you have liked support from Europe in the border conflict with China in 2020?

My point is: just as I do not expect Europe to have a view of China that is identical to mine, Europe should understand that I cannot have a view of Russia that is identical to the European one. Let us accept that there are natural differences in relationships.

Do these differences in relations with Russia put a strain on India-Europe relations?

Both sides have communicated their positions clearly and have not emphasized their differences. But yes, there are differences. You mentioned the energy issue. When the fighting started in Ukraine, Europe shifted a large part of its energy procurement to the Middle East - until then the main supplier for India and other countries. What should we have done? In many cases, our Middle East suppliers gave priority to Europe because Europe paid higher prices. Either we would have had no energy because everything would have gone to them. Or we would have ended up paying a lot more because you were paying more. And in a certain way, we stabilized the energy market that way.

In what way?

If no one had bought the crude oil from Russia and everyone had bought the crude oil from the other countries, prices on the energy market would have shot up even further. Global inflation would have been much higher - and that would have been a huge political issue in lower-income countries.

In this way, however, India is undermining the effect of the sanctions against Russia.

If Europe had wanted to maximize the damage at the time, it would have had to stop all economic relations with Russia completely. But it didn't. If Europe was so convinced and the principles were so important, why did it allow relations to end gently? Why were there exceptions for pipeline gas, for individual countries and so on? That's what governments do, they manage politics with an eye on the consequences for their people.

Did the Russian invasion of Ukraine two years ago change the Russian-Indian relationship?

We are deeply convinced, and are publicly committed to bringing the conflict to an end. Everyone is suffering from this conflict. I don't know exactly how it will end, we're not deep enough into the process to know.

Isn't that why you could be a mediator?

Theoretically, yes. We have already helped with very specific issues. When Turkey negotiated the corridor through the Black Sea, for example. And we were very supportive of the inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency, IAEA, of the Zaporizhzhya nuclear power plant. Wherever we can help, we are happy to do so. We are open when we are approached. However, we do not believe that we should initiate anything in this direction on our own.

Let's talk about India's relations with Europe. The EU and India resumed negotiations for a free trade agreement in 2022. Will it work now?

Free trade agreements are very complex, and one with the EU is the most complex in the world for any country because it also discusses many non-trade issues. Only the EU does that. In addition, the negotiations had been dormant for years in the meantime. We have built on what was negotiated in the past, but many things have changed since then.

Do you believe that the free trade agreement can still be concluded this year?

I know a lot of people are working on it and I know it's very complicated, so I wouldn't make a prediction. It's not that I don't think it's possible. It's just that it's so complicated that I wouldn't just give a timetable. But our relations with Europe are really developing well in various areas.

Which areas do you mean?

We are also working with the EU in the Council for Trade and Technology, which deals with the important issue of strategic technologies. There is also a great need in Europe for skilled workers in this area. We have therefore concluded mobility agreements with Germany, Portugal, France and some others. We consider relations with Europe to be one of our most important relationships. When we talk about a multipolar world, there is no question for us that Europe is a pole and, as a pole, must be involved not only in economic but also in political and strategic issues. One of our recent successes is that we have reached an agreement to build a connectivity corridor from India to Europe through the Middle East.

India is trying to buy more weapons from Germany. Do you see a change in German policy?

Germany has long been cautious when it comes to security and defense. In contrast, we have had robust cooperation with France for a long time and to a more limited extent with Spain and Italy. But I have seen a development in Germany's attitude in recent years; my interlocutors now understand that you can't completely exclude one part of a relationship. It is developing - and that is good for both sides.

Specifically, India wants to buy six submarines, among other things. Thyssen-Krupp is one of the last suppliers in the race. Is there any progress?

The talks are ongoing. I think these things take time.

Minister Jaishankar, thank you very much for the interview.⍐

Farmers' Protest: Why are farmers demanding India's withdrawal from WTO?


  • The WTO has 164 members representing 98 per cent of world trade.
  • WTO deals and determinant with the rules of trade between nations.         
  • India has been a member of WTO since January 1995.
  • Indian farmers want legal guarantee regarding MSP, but WTO rules are exactly the opposite. 
Prashant Tamta https://www.dnaindia.com : Feb 13, 2024

Farmers started protesting on Tuesday with a new set of demands including a legal guarantee of Minimum Support Price (MSP) for crops and India's withdrawal from the World Trade Organization (WTO). The protesting farmers also want India to scrap all Free Trade Agreements (FTA). But why are farmers demanding withdrawal from WTO? 


The international trade body deals with the rules of trade between nations. According to WTO rules, member countries are required to limit the amount of domestic support they provide to their agricultural producers. This is because excessive subsidies can distort international trade. They also include individual countries’ commitments to lower trade barriers and open services markets. Many countries express concern about India's subsidy to its farmers, saying it will affect the global agricultural business.

India has been a member of WTO since January 1995. Indian farmers want legal guarantee regarding MSP, but WTO rules are exactly the opposite. India has also promised that it will not give any guarantee on fixing its MSP. Due to this, farmers want India to come out of WTO to accept their demands related to MSP. Besides, it should also cancel all FTAs so that it does not have to bow to the conditions of any other country or organization.

The WTO has 164 members representing 98 per cent of world trade. Moreover, a free trade agreement (FTA) also involves reducing or eliminating tariffs on items traded between the partner countries. Meanwhile, developing nations have also been demanding a special safeguard mechanism that would permit them to impose import restrictions if there is a surge in import of an agricultural item or a decline in its price. They say that this could result in loss of livelihood of farmers in the country and a threat to food security.⍐

Why Farmers Are Marching Toward Delhi Again

Why Farmers Are Marching Toward Delhi Again

This time they want a stronger guarantee that they can make money selling their wheat and rice crops.


Once again, India’s capital is bracing itself for a siege. Not by a foreign army but by an army of Indian farmers, streaming toward New Delhi from nearby states to protest government policies.

The farmers’ march has turned the city’s main points of entry into choke points, as the federal and local police go into overdrive: barricading highways by pouring concrete and stacking shipping containers to halt the advancing tractors.

The authorities have blocked the social media accounts of some protest leaders and even used drones that were once billed as an agricultural innovation to drop tear-gas grenades on the demonstrators.

Didn’t this happen before?
The scenes hark back to North India’s biggest protests of 2020 and 2021, when hundreds of thousands of farmers, mostly from the states of Punjab and Haryana, forced the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi to abandon three bills meant to overhaul India’s agricultural economy.

If the farmers prevailed then — in a rare retreat for the powerful Mr. Modi — why are they massing again, threatening or even causing disruptions in and out of an urban area that is home to about 30 million people?
Farmers taking cover from tear gas about 150 miles from New Delhi on Tuesday.Credit...Rajat Gupta/EPA, via Shutterstock
This time, the farmers’ central demand concerns something called the minimum support price, or M.S.P. They want it to be increased, adding a 50 percent premium to whatever it costs them to produce wheat and rice.

Sarwan Singh Pandher, a leader of a committee representing hundreds of smaller farmers’ unions, said that many of their demands had been left hanging after they ended their protests more than two years ago, “especially about the M.S.P. being made a legal guarantee.”

A barrier intended to block farmers from reaching Delhi.Credit...Sajjad Hussain/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Economists tend to hate the M.S.P. and its effects on farming. It leads directly to food price inflation, for one thing.

And by divorcing farmers’ earnings from the traded value of staple cereals, the controlled prices — in combination with free electricity and subsidized fertilizer — have encouraged overproduction of rice, for instance, in areas that are naturally semiarid. That depletes water tables and brings the kind of stubble burning that helps pollute Delhi’s air every autumn.

 

Why do farmers want price supports?
The M.S.P. should act as a form of social insurance, by sparing the majority of India’s population, which still depends on farming incomes, from the volatility that comes with changing weather patterns and internationally set grain prices.In practice, it is India’s better-off farmers who would stand to lose the most if the M.S.P. was eliminated; annual incomes in Punjab are higher than in the rest of the country’s grain belt.Farmers who are inching closer to the middle class often feel the pinch of stagnating incomes most sharply. Many families in Punjab have invested in higher education as a way up. But acute unemployment makes those debts hard to pay down. In the poorer parts of the country, indebted farmers often resort to suicide

 

Mr. Modi had promised to double the incomes that they had in 2015, and on that the government has fallen far short. It makes farmers’ demands more urgent, Mr. Pandher said: “Either the government should come around or grant us the right to protest peacefully in 
Delhi.”

How did it all end last time?

The earlier round of protests reached its peak in January 2021. After camping outside the capital, farmers who had endured pandemic hardships stormed through barricades to challenge Mr. Modi’s own Republic Day parade, a confrontation that had long-lasting political consequences. 

Farmers protesting in New Delhi in January 2021.Credit...Saumya Khandelwal for The New York Times

The farmers seemed to win; the proposed laws were repealed later that year. But with Punjabi Sikhs highly visible in the movement’s leadership, the government began cracking down on Sikh separatists soon after. And apparently not just by lawful means: The government has been accused of orchestrating assassination attempts in Canada and the United States.

Apart from Sikh politics, the leadership of the farmer movement may be bargaining that now is the best time to make their demands, when election season is upon Mr. Modi and he would presumably not want to be seen fighting back poor farmers circled around Delhi.

  • Alex Travelli is a correspondent for The Times based in New Delhi, covering business and economic matters in India and the rest of South Asia. He previously worked as an editor and correspondent for The Economist.
  • Suhasini Raj is a reporter based in New Delhi who has covered India for The Times since 2014.

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