Close X
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
ADVT 
India

Uproar Over Farmer's Suicide At AAP Rally, Narendra Modi Calls For Collective Steps

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Apr, 2015 10:48 AM
    The suicide by a Rajasthan farmer at an AAP rally in Delhi caused political ripples inside and outside parliament on Thursday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi calling for a collective resolve to end farmer suicides and the Aam Aadmi Party accusing the government of using Delhi Police to target it.
     
    Members in both the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha expressed their pain and anguish over Rajasthan's Gajendra Singh committing suicide by hanging himself from a tree at an Aam Aadmi Party rally at Jantar Mantar in the capital on Wednesday.
     
    As Gajendra Singh was on Thursday cremated in his Nangal Jhamarwara village in Dausa district of Rajasthan, tearful people raised slogans against the government.
     
    The family of the farmer, whose crops were destroyed by unseasonal rain causing him distress, hit out at the AAP over his death, saying none of its leaders tried to dissuade him during the party's protest against the land ordinance.
     
    Delhi Police on Thursday refused to join the magisterial probe ordered by the city government into the suicide and said it was conducting its own probe on the basis of a first information report (FIR).
     
    Home Minister Rajnath Singh made a statement in the Lok Sabha in response to the concern of members, and termed the incident "shameful" and "very unfortunate".
     
    His statement that Delhi Police had taken steps to bring Gajendra Singh down from the tree but could not engage him in conversation as the crowd at the rally continued cheering their leaders was contested by AAP leaders.
     
    The AAP, which blamed Delhi Police for not acting in time to save the farmer, accused Rajnath Singh of making misleading statements.
     
     
    AAP leaders also accused the BJP-led central government of using Delhi Police as "a tool".
     
    The AAP on Thursday announced assistance of Rs.10 lakh for the family of Gajendra Singh and promised to support his children's education.
     
    An AAP delegation led by Sanjay Singh is likely to visit the late farmer's village in Dausa district.
     
    Speaking in the Lok Sabha after the home minister, Modi said the entire nation was pained at the suicide and he was joining parliament members in expressing their anguish.
     
    He said the problem of suicide by farmers was "old and widespread" and called for a collective response to end it.
     
    "That collective resolve should come out in today's discussion that we will all together not let our farmers' die (commit suicide). This is the prayer I have from the house," Modi said.
     
    Rajnath Singh said the government and the opposition must introspect why the condition of farmers had not improved even so many years after independence.
     
    He said that in 1950-51, farmers contributed 55 percent of India's total GDP, which had fallen to 14 percent though 58 percent of the population was still dependent on agriculture.
     
    Modi earlier in the day met his ministers over the incident and was briefed by Rajnath Singh.
     
     
    Delhi Police Commissioner B.S. Bassi, who faced a volley of questions from the media over the suicide, said a thorough probe will be conducted.
     
    With the Arvind Kejriwal government in Delhi having asked the district magistrate of New Delhi to probe the suicide, Delhi Police wrote to him that they were already conducting a probe.
     
    "We have written a letter saying that he (the district magistrate) has no jurisdiction," Bassi told the media.
     
    Bassi, who submitted a report to the home ministry, also said the preliminary medical report based on the autopsy of Gajendra Singh revealed that the cause of his death was hanging.
     
    The AAP leadership faced criticism from the Bharatiya Janata Party, the Congress and the Bahujan Samaj Party for continuing with the rally even after the farmer was taken to hospital.
     
    "It is criminal negligence," Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi said.
     
    Congress leader Deepender Hooda asked: "When the incident was taking place, why didn't anybody stop him? Why didn't the police personnel do anything? Why did the leaders present there continue with their speeches?"
     
    Gajendra Singh's uncle Gopal Singh told IANS: "Why did no leader of the Aam Aadmi Party try to dissuade him (from climbing the tree)? We hold police and the AAP leadership responsible for his death."
     
    The day also saw protests by Congress workers outside Kejriwal's residence. Congress workers also lit candles at Jantar Mantar.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    BJP Marks 35th Foundation Day, Advani Not Officially Invited

    BJP Marks 35th Foundation Day, Advani Not Officially Invited
    The BJP held its 35th foundation day function at the party office here but party patriarch L. K. Advani was not "officially" invited for the event, sources said.

    BJP Marks 35th Foundation Day, Advani Not Officially Invited

    Morgan Stanley Sees 'Achhe Din' For India

    Morgan Stanley Sees 'Achhe Din' For India
    With the rural wage growth coming down to a nine-year low at 5.5 percent this January and inflation seemingly stabilizing, India is bracing for a long period of higher sustainable growth and lower prices, financial services firm Morgan Stanley said on Monday.

    Morgan Stanley Sees 'Achhe Din' For India

    Road Rage: Impatient Motorists Beat Delhi Man To Death

    Road Rage: Impatient Motorists Beat Delhi Man To Death
    Shahnawaz, a resident of Mata Sundari Road in central Delhi, , who was beaten to death by five people even as his sons, who witnessed the entire incident, unsuccessfully tried to get police to intervene. One of the accused was arrested on Monday.

    Road Rage: Impatient Motorists Beat Delhi Man To Death

    Rediscovering Mahatma Gandhi In This Globalised Age

    Rediscovering Mahatma Gandhi In This Globalised Age

    It's almost a month since British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond visited India, a few days ...

    Rediscovering Mahatma Gandhi In This Globalised Age

    Greatest Harm Would Happen If Indian Judiciary Doesn't Rectify, Introspect: Narendra Modi

    Greatest Harm Would Happen If Indian Judiciary Doesn't Rectify, Introspect: Narendra Modi
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Sunday there was a need to create good law institutions and capable manpower keeping future in mind.

    Greatest Harm Would Happen If Indian Judiciary Doesn't Rectify, Introspect: Narendra Modi

    Freak Weather Ruins Crops In Punjab, Haryana

    Freak Weather Ruins Crops In Punjab, Haryana
    For nearly a decade, farmer Bhupinder Singh has often looked at the sky to thank god for his bumper wheat crop. This year is different. In the past one month, unseasonal rains and hailstorms have left Singh a worried man. Nearly 30 percent of his wheat crop spread over seven acres has been flattened.

    Freak Weather Ruins Crops In Punjab, Haryana