Farms.com Home   Ag Industry News

Ont. community supports farmers in India

Ont. community supports farmers in India

Brampton residents have held rallies in solidarity with Indian farmers over agriculture bills passed in that country

By Diego Flammini
Staff Writer
Farms.com

Residents and lawmakers in a Peel Region community are showing support for farmers in India.

On Oct. 14, Brampton councillors unanimously passed a motion “standing in solidarity with the people of Brampton and their families who are affected by three (agricultural) bills that were passed in India,” Councillor Gurpreet Singh Dhillon told Farms.com. “It’s nothing political against the Indian government, it’s just us saying we understand (farmers in India) are going through something, so we’re going to stand with you.”


 Councillor Gurpreet Singh Dhillon

Councillor Dhillon made the motion and Regional Councillor Martin Mderiros seconded it.

Farmers in India are protesting three bills the country’s federal government passed in September. This legislation will hurt the industry, producers say.

But Indian lawmakers say the Farmers’ Produce Trade and Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Bill, 2020, the Farmers (Empowerment and Protection) Agreement of Price Assurance and Farm Services Bill, 2020, and the Essential Commodities (Amendment) Bill, 2020 will work in farmers’ favour.

“The country has freed its farmers from many restrictions. Now, the farmer can sell his produce to anyone, anywhere,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi said, DW.com reported.

The bills would allow farmers to sell goods to directly to private buyers instead of solely participating in government-regulated transactions. The legislation also provide frameworks for farmers to enter into written agreements with buyers.

But local farmers worry representatives of private business won’t negotiate in good faith.

“The private sector will give us a good price for one or two years, but what about after that?” Karam Singh, an Indian farmer, told Al Jazeera. “The government should guarantee the private sector will give us more than the government price.”

In Brampton, many residents of its Indian community have family members who farm or own land in the Asian country.

“My family still owns 10 acres through my father and many constituents do have land or family there as well,” Councillor Dhillon said. “A lot of us have one foot here and one foot (in India), so we know what the farmers there are going through.

“Farming is such a noble profession and farmers are the reason we can eat. Their livelihoods should be protected.”

Brampton residents also showed support for farmers in India.

The Sikh Motorcycle Club of Ontario held the Solidarity Rally for Punjabi Farmers on Oct. 11 to “protest the anti-farmer ordinances passed by (the) Indian Modi government to suppress the already financially weak farmer,” Ravinder Kaur said on Facebook.

Indian communities from other parts of the world are supporting the country’s farmers too.

Members of California’s Indian community protested outside of the Indian consulate in San Francisco on Oct. 4.

Other demonstrations have occurred in France, England and the United Kingdom.


Trending Video

CEOs of the Industry: John McIntire, Partner at Pike Pig Systems

Video: CEOs of the Industry: John McIntire, Partner at Pike Pig Systems

CEOs of the Industry, Jim sits down with John McIntire, Partner at Pike Pig Systems, one of the most quietly impressive 26,000-sow operations in the U.S. John shares how he grew from operator to partner, how Pike built a people-first culture with long-tenured managers, and why they’re committed to weaning bigger, stronger pigs at 25+ days.

John breaks down how Pike stays efficient in a tough economic environment, the power of their shareholder-owned farm model, and how their work with PIC and a 240-head boar facility drives genetics and health outcomes. He also opens up about the innovations Pike adopts — and how they decide what’s truly valuable versus industry hype.

From Prop 12 and labor challenges to trade, consumer expectations, and sustainability, John chooses a hot-button issue and shares how Pike is preparing for the future. The episode closes with a rapid-fire “Fast Five” — mindset, leadership, daily habits, and three words that define Pike Pig Systems in 2025.

If you want a look inside a people-driven, purpose-driven, quietly elite pork system, this is an episode you won’t want to miss.