Palaniswamy urges Tamil Nadu farmers to call off protest, promises to take up their demands with PM Modi

The protesting farmers have been demanding a Rs 40,000-crore drought relief package, farm loan waiver and setting up of the Cauvery Management Board by the Centre. 
Tamil Nadu chief minister Edappadi Palaniswami meet the farmers  who have been protesting at Jantar Mantar for the last 39 days, in New Delhi on Sunday. (Shekhar Yadav | EPS)
Tamil Nadu chief minister Edappadi Palaniswami meet the farmers  who have been protesting at Jantar Mantar for the last 39 days, in New Delhi on Sunday. (Shekhar Yadav | EPS)

NEW DELHI: Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswamy today urged the farmers from his state who have been protesting at Jantar Mantar to call off their strike and assured them of taking up their demands with Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Palaniswamy made the remarks after visiting the farmers at Jantar Mantar, for the first time, on the 41st day of their protest in which they have been demanding a Rs-40,000 crore drought relief package, farm loan waiver and setting up of the Cauvery Management Board by the Centre. "I will be taking up the issue of loan waiver among others with the prime minister while meeting him today," Palaniswamy said. The chief minister also talked about the steps the state government had taken to mitigate the hardship of farmers. "We had even submitted a memorandum comprising various demands from the state during my previous meeting with the prime minister," he said.

"Therefore, I request the protesting farmers to call off their strike." Lok Sabha Deputy Speaker M

Thambidurai, who also accompanied Palaniswami, said the Tamil Nadu government was working on the demands raised by the protestors. Asked about the political situation in Tamil Nadu, the chief minister said he would like to comment only on the farmers' issues.

Palaniswamy is in the national capital to take part in a NITI Aayog meeting along with chief ministers of other states. Over the last 40 days, the farmers have turned to increasingly desperate measures to direct attention to their issues. They have shaved their heads and half their moustaches and kept mice and snakes in their mouths, conducted mock funerals, flogged themselves and even carried skulls of other farmers who had committed suicide due to debt pressure.

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