CM Amarinder hits out at MHA for spreading misinformation on bonded labour against Punjab farmers

Trashing the Home Ministry's letter from March 17, Punjab government called it a bundle of lies aimed at undermining the farmers’ protest and denigrating the Congress government in the state.
Punjab CM Amarinder Singh (Photo | PTI)
Punjab CM Amarinder Singh (Photo | PTI)

CHANDIGARH: Punjab Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh on Sunday castigated the BJP-led NDA-Government at the Centre for spreading misinformation about the state’s farmers with its grave and incorrect allegations of bonded labourers working in the fields. 

Trashing the Home Ministry's letter from March 17, Punjab government called it a bundle of lies aimed at undermining the farmers’ protest and denigrating the Congress government in the state.

Amarinder termed it yet another conspiracy to defame Punjab’s farmers, whom the central government and the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have been persistently trying to malign by dubbing them terrorists, urban naxals, goons etc, in a bid to derail their agitation against the farm Laws.

A careful analysis of the whole episode reveals that highly sensitive information pertaining to national security regarding the arrest of some suspicious persons, apprehended by BSF from close to the volatile Indo-Pak border, has been unscrupulously twisted on baseless conjectures to malign and tarnish the farmer community, said Amarinder. 

"This reality has been further substantiated by the fact that a selective leakage of the contents of the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA)  letter has been done without waiting for an appropriate response from the state government," he added.

Rejecting the letter as totally 'unwarranted and factually incorrect', he said neither the data nor the said reports submitted by the BSF authorities were in tune with the content of the letter. “The MHA letter talks of Abohar also while the fact is that there is no case of Abohar or Fazilka districts,” he pointed out, adding that none of the conclusions of the Centre were borne out by facts. Further, it was not the job of the BSF to investigate such matters, and they were only responsible for detaining any person found to be roaming along the border in suspicious circumstances, and handing them over to the local police, he added.

Before shooting out such a letter and making it public, the MHA should have checked the facts and verified the information from the state government instead of making false accusations against farmers, and charging them with indulging in bonded labour and converting the labourers into drug addicts, he added. He was referring to the MHA statement that “illegal human trafficking syndicates exploit these gullible labourers and Punjabi farmers hook them to drugs to make them work for long hours in their fields.”

“All the 58 cases alleged by the Centre have been investigated thoroughly and nothing of this kind has been found,” said Amarinder, lambasting the MHA for spreading such vicious and false propaganda. Giving details, he said of the 58 detainees, four belong to different areas of Punjab and were found roaming near the Indo-Pak border by the BSF, while three were found to be intellectually disabled. One Paramjit Singh of Patiala, apprehended near Pathankot, was mentally disabled from the last 20 years and had left his home about two months before his detention. Roorh Singh of Gurdaspur had to be admitted to the Institute of Mental Health, Amritsar, on the day of his apprehension. Another person namely Sukhwinder Singh of SBS Nagar was also facing mental health issue. Subsequently, all these three persons were handed over to their family members on the same day, after verification by the local police.

Further, 16 of the 58 detainees were found to be intellectually disabled, of whom four were suffering since childhood. One Babu Singh of Bulandshahr in UP was even having psychiatric treatment from Agra and was handed over to his family members on the production of his medical record. Even the identify of three persons apprehended by BSF could not be established due to their mental health conditions, he said, rejecting even the possibility of these men being kept as bonded labourers for farm activities.

"It has also come to light that 14 persons had come to Punjab only a few days prior to them being taken into preventive custody, there there is no question of them working as bonded labourers in farms," said the Chief Minister, adding that none of the persons apprehended has made any allegation of being forcibly kept as farm labourers under inhuman conditions even before the courts.

Nothing on record suggests that these persons were forcibly infused drugs to keep them working for long hours, and moreover, it is incorrect to conclude that the intellectual disability of these people is drug-induced, said Amarinder. He added that most of them were medically examined with the help of BSF or police, and nothing on record suggested that they were hooked to any habit forming drugs.

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