Police in India’s northern state of of Punjab detained hundreds of farmers and used bulldozers to tear down their temporary camps in a border area where they had protested for more than a year to demand better crop prices.The farmers had camped on the border with adjoining Haryana since last February, when security forces halted their march toward the capital, New Delhi, to press for legally-backed guarantees of more state support for crops.“We did not need to use any force because there was no resistance,” Nanak Singh, a senior police officer, said about the clearance action. “The farmers co-operated well and they sat in buses themselves.”The farmers had been given prior notice, he added.Television images showed police using bulldozers to demolish tents and stages, while escorting farmers carrying personal items to vehicles.Media said among the hundreds detained were farmers’ leaders Sarwan Singh Pandher and Jagjit Singh Dallewal, the latter carried away in an ambulance as he had been on an indefinite protest fast for months.“On one hand the government is negotiating with the farmer organisations and on the other hand it is arresting them,” Rakesh Tikait, a spokesperson for farmer group Bhartiya Kisan Union said on X.Punjab’s ruling Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), which authorised the eviction, said it stood by the farmers in their demands, but asked them to take up their grievances with the federal government.“Let’s work together to safeguard Punjab’s interests,” said the party’s vice-president in the state, Tarunpreet Singh Sond, adding that the blockage of key roads had hurt the state’s economy. “Closing highways is not the solution.”
