Haryana Police Proceed to Collect Farmers’ Properties for Vandalism, Saying “Protester Pays”

Image Source: Google News
According to the police, farmers are making persistent attempts to breach the barriers erected at the Punjab-Haryana border and undermine law and order. The farmers whose property was damaged during their ‘Dilli Chalo’ protest march will have their assets seized by the Haryana Police.
Police stated in a statement that farmers were making persistent attempts to smash down the barriers erected at the Punjab-Haryana border and undermine law and order by throwing stones at the officers.
The Haryana Police threatened to seize the unions’ assets if they caused damage to public property during their agitation, even before the farmers began their protest on February 13. The notification threatened to freeze bank accounts and take assets to make up for any damages if the protesters caused damage to public property.
According to the Haryana Police, during the farmers’ demonstration in the Ambala area, two police officers lost their lives and over thirty were injured on Thursday.
At first, the police had declared that they would use the National Security Act (NSA), 1980, to take action against the agricultural leaders who were demonstrating. Later, the order was cancelled.
Farmers had been working hard to take down the obstacles that had been put up at the Shambhu border as part of the ‘Dilli Chalo’ march, according to a news release from the Ambala Police.
The police documented instances where demonstrators threw stones at law enforcement officials, damaged government and public property, and made attempts to disturb the quiet.
The statement stated that two officers had died and about thirty officers had been injured, including one who suffered a brain haemorrhage, as a result of the encounters.
The news release also raised worries about certain farm leaders’ use of social media sites including Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Telegram to disseminate content that is meant to upset peace.
The farmers’ protest, which started on February 13, was suspended for two days on Wednesday following the death of a protestor and the injuries of roughly a dozen police officers during altercations at Khanauri, one of the two protest locations along the Punjab-Haryana border.
News agency PTI reports that farmer leader Sarwan Singh Pandher informed reporters in Shambhu that they will determine the next move on Friday night.
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