Condemning Modi's 'Anti-People Policies' Ahead of India's Election, Striking Farmers and Workers Grind New Delhi to Halt
Fed up with the “anti-people policies” of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s right-wing government, tens of thousands of farmers and workers in India brought central Delhi to a standstill on Wednesday in a huge demonstration to demand higher wages, debt waivers, and other economic reforms.
The protests, marked by crowds of protesters wearing red and carrying red flags lining the entire stretch of Parliament Street, came ahead of next year’s general elections and at the end of a summer when Indians struggled to live on stagnant wages and farmers faced barely-rising prices on the produce they provide to their communities.
Demonstrators expressed anger at Modi, who promised during his 2014 campaign to tackle the country’s high unemployment rate among young people, affecting more than 10 percent of 15 to 24 year olds at the time. Last year 10.5 percent of young Indians were still in need of jobs.
“This historic rally…demanding better wages, more jobs, better prices for farm produce, end to privatization, stopping changes in labor laws, marks a new stage in the struggle of working people,” the Communist Party of India said in a statement. The party led the protest along with the left-wing Center of Indian Trade Unions (CITU), All India Kisan Sabha (AIKS), and All-India Agricultural Workers’ Union (AIAWU).
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