Farmers stop the train at Amritsa on May 7, the movement will take place on the Delhi Line

The Kisan Mazdoor Sangharsh Committee (KMSC) has announced that the train stop movement will be held on May 7 at the Devidas Pura Railway Station in Amritsar district of Punjab. The station is on the way to the Amritsar-Delhi Railway. This movement of farmers can see the impact on railway traffic. Farmers say the government is forcibly buying agricultural land and instead is not proper compensation to the farmers. This was announced by farmers when the Punjab border areas were overweight and when there was a tension with Pakistan.
After the Pahalgam attack, there was an atmosphere of tension on the border of India and Pakistan. The Amritsar district is bordered by the Pakistan region. In connection with the train Roko movement, KMSC leader Saravan Singh Pandher said that the movement was called a day, which would continue, and it depends on the administration’s response. If the demand for the farmers is not fulfilled, on May 8, many other places in the movement will be added and the movement will take place.
Demand for appropriate compensation
KMSC State President Sukhwinder Singh Sabha, General Secretary Rana Ranbir Singh and leader Saravan Singh Pandar made the announcement at the meeting held at Amritsar on Sunday evening, according to the India Express report. Leaders of the Punjab government headed by Chief Minister Bhagwant Man have been transformed into a “police state” without complying with proper legal and compensation.
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Pondher said, “Over the past three years, we have protested in many places, where hundreds of farmers have rejected their fundamental rights. “In most cases, land owners have not yet compensated, although the authorities are forcibly forcing their land to occupy.”
Anti -Punjab government
He said that the situation in villages like Lavek (Amritsar) was tense and that the authorities had deployed huge police forces to capture the land on Saturday and agricultural land. However, the farmers have again occupied some areas. Sabra said, “In the name of development, this arbitrary can only help corporate interests, landowners are in trouble.” He warned that if the concerns were not resolved, the state government would have to experience its consequences.