‘Stop Adani’ expresses solidarity with peaceful mass protests led by Indian farmers

0d890656-1b16-4e5c-9a19-3953c9254a8e

By SAT News Desk

MELBOURNE, 10 December 2020: Australia’s ‘Stop Adani’ organization, spearheading the movement against the controversial coal mine in Queensland, being developed by Gautam Adani’s ‘Adani Australia’, has expressed solidarity with the protesting Indian farmers assembled at the outstrikes of the Indian capital, New Delhi.

The organization has issued the following statement:

” As a people-powered movement that has prevented the Adani company from digging its climate-wrecking coal mine for ten years, the Stop Adani movement stands in solidarity with Indian farmers leading mass peaceful protests against Modi and Adani’s farm laws.

Arguably the largest protests in human history, with organizers estimating 250 million people took part, farmer-led protests erupted in response to three laws passed by Modi’s Government, with farmers concerned deregulation of agricultural markets will favor corporate interests such as billionaire Adani’s agricultural businesses, and make farmers vulnerable to exploitation.

Advertisement

Blatant crony capitalism in India and Australia favors billionaires at the expense of communities, families, and the environment. Recent news of a $1 Billion (5000 crore) loan from the State Bank of India to Adani confirms that Modi’s Government is working for corporate interests above all else. In Australia too, Governments have showered Adani’s coal project with public funds and special treatment, with mass protests stopping a $1 Billion public loan to Adani in 2017.

Governments must act in the public interest by putting farmers, communities, and the environment first. The Stop Adani movement will continue to push Government decision-makers to act for the public good and support those campaigning against crony capitalism in India.”

Manjot Kaur, Stop Adani spokesperson and Indian-Australian says, “My family in Punjab comes from generations of farmers, the same farmers that are currently protesting against Modi and Adani’s farm laws. My father, grandfather, and many before me have been farming wheat on the same land, for generations. My family wants to continue farming for generations to come, but these law changes and climate change threaten our way of life. My grandfather has seen the weather change, seen the river he used to play in become polluted, and struggled against drought.

“Crony capitalism in India is driving Indian farming communities to the brink – from deregulating agricultural laws for big corporates to the State Bank’s 5000 crores (AUD $1 Billion) loan to Adani for their dangerous coal project, a project that will mine and burn coal and bring more climate disasters to Indian farming communities. Farmers that are fighting for their existence are the ones who deserve support from the state bank and protection from the Government, not billionaire coal companies like Adani.”

Amongst other changes, the farm laws could lead to minimum support price (MSP) safeguards being scrapped. MSP guarantees a price for farmers for particular crops, no matter the seasonal outlook.

As the world experiences more droughts, heatwaves, floods, and storms from climate change, driven by export coal from Australian coal mines, these farm law changes make Indian farmers even more vulnerable to the seasonal disruptions that will intensify with climate change.

16336526731883929
Neeraj Nanda

Share to

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Share on reddit
Share on email
Tags

Get our Newsletter and e-Paper

Related Articles

Police investigate Tarneit shooting involving 3 Indians

Police investigate Tarneit shooting involving 3 Indians

Attacks on health care in Gaza Strip unacceptable, says WHO

Attacks on health care in Gaza Strip unacceptable, says WHO

Astronomy : A Sharper look at the first image of a Black Hole

Astronomy : A Sharper look at the first image of a Black Hole