hidden image

New Strategy to Mount Pressure on Govt, Says Tikait

Manoj Varghese Manoj Varghese
01 Mar 2021

“An all-out effort is being made to convince the Govt to withdraw the three Farm Laws,” says Rakesh Tikait, leading the farmers’ protest from the front, in an interview with Manoj Varghese. The tractor rally and rail rokho abhiyan on January 26 and February 6 were just a trailer of bigger things to follow in the days to come. In the three-month long agitation, Mr Tikait has become the face of the protest. 

What is the reason for the thin crowd on borders?
We have changed our strategy, and are holding Mahapanchayats and Khap panchayats in villages across the country. The aim is to convenience the local farmers, who in turn will mount pressure on their local Member of Parliament. And, on the national front, we will be marching towards the Parliament to express our solidarity and press for our demands. So, the plan is to build momentum from the grassroots level to the Parliament and from the Parliament to the villages. 

How do you plan to carry out the Parliament gherao?
We want to send across the message aloud that we are not only Gandhiwadi, but if needed would stand up to the expectations of Subash Chandra Bose and Bhagat Singh. The Sanyukt Kissan Morcha will decide the entire road map in its forthcoming meeting. Tractor is our tool, and if required will involve 40 lakh tractors across the country. And, we will march towards the Parliament keeping the traffic and previous chaos in mind. Our patience and calmness are not our weakness, but is a mark of patriotism. 
    
How is the Mahapanchayats and Khap panchayats helping your Andolan?
The Mahapanchayats and Khap panchayats are our life saving drugs and are helping in garnering support at the local level. In a recent BJP meeting, presided over by its president and the Union Home Minister, the MPs were asked to visit their local constituencies and convince the farmers. But, at many places, they were not allowed to enter villages and address farmers, at places they even faced the brunt of local farmers.

How come that the movement is not getting much support from South India?
It’s not like that. A lot of protests are happening there too, but is not being covered by the media. I would be addressing farmers’ rally in Telengana on March 6 and then in Karnataka from March 19 to 21 along with several other leaders of Sanyukth Kisan Morcha.
  
Any update on the Supreme Court-constituted committee?
We have no update on this. We have not been invited to their meetings or asked for our opinion. We just came to know that one meeting was held at Pusa with some ‘so-called farmers’ who are supporting the farm laws. 


 

Recent Posts

In an era when faith is often kept carefully outside the public square, VD Satheesan, Leader of the Opposition in the Kerala Legislative Assembly, speaks of the Bible with an ease that is neither perf
apicture Dr Suresh Mathew
29 Dec 2025
For seventy years, Christmas felt benign. This year, people were wishing each other a "safe" Christmas. That single adjective reveals India's moral crisis. Mobs rule, and symbolism has replaced govern
apicture A. J. Philip
29 Dec 2025
Festivals once nurtured harmony; today, they are weaponised. Hate, boycotts, and violence have replaced pluralism, enabled by silence from power and an ideology hostile to India's constitutional promi
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
29 Dec 2025
As the new year dawns, India pauses to introspect—except its institutions. Data reveals a justice system dulled by delay, selective mercy, and unequal enforcement, where survivors wait, the powerful w
apicture Jaswant Kaur
29 Dec 2025
On December 15, 2025, in Kanker district, Chhattisgarh, a province in the central part of India, the father of Rajman Salam, an elected sarpanch (village headman), was buried according to Christian ri
apicture United Christian Forum
29 Dec 2025
Renaming the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) into the Viksit Bharat Guarantee for Employment and Livelihood Mission (Rural) Bill, dubbed "G RAM G" and pushed through P
apicture Oliver D'Souza
29 Dec 2025
In the land of Tagore, Vivekananda, and Gandhi—who preached universal faith and freedom—religion is now weaponised. Constitutional guarantees are undermined by vigilantes, anti-conversion laws, and si
apicture John S. Shilshi
29 Dec 2025
In the thundering storm of ignorance and fear, Rose a voice, fierce and clear-Periyar, the seer. A flame against the darkness, a sword against the lie, He challenged the shadows that veiled the sky
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
29 Dec 2025
Christmas celebrations in Arunachal grew into vibrant expressions of faith and culture. Today, they are celebrated widely across the state, but their roots trace back to that fragile, defiant begin
apicture CM Paul
29 Dec 2025
The Lord Jesus has promised that the stones will cry out. What remains to be decided—by me, by my Order, by the Church in India—is whether we will raise our voices with them, or whether our silence wi
apicture Fr. Anil Prakash D'Souza, OP
29 Dec 2025