Harmandeep Singh is standing with colourful kites strewn all around him. Up ahead, at the Shambhu border between Punjab and Haryana, huge barricades have been set up by the police to prevent farmers from marching to Delhi.
The 17-year-old from Amritsar used the kites to bring down the drones that were dropping tear-gas shells on the protesting farmers, an innovative way to counter the attack. “I have also applied toothpaste around my eyes as it helps in reducing the effects of tear gas. We will march ahead and win this battle,” he says.
Harmandeep is one among thousands of farmers and labourers from Punjab who began their peaceful march to Delhi on 13 February 2024. At the Shambhu border, they were met with paramilitary, Rapid Action Force (RAF) personnel, and police officers. Iron nails and concrete walls were placed on the road, barring farmers from reaching their protest site in Delhi.
At the first barricade, Gurjand Singh Khalsa, addresses a gathering, reiterating the five main demands – guarantee of minimum support price (MSP) as per the recommendations of the Swaminathan Commission, a complete waiver of debts for farmers and farm labourers, justice for the farmers affected in the Lakhimpur Kheri massacre and to arrest the culprits, introduce a pension scheme for farmers and labourers and to compensate the families of farmers who were martyred in the 2020-2021 protest.
























