The roughly 40,000 farmers gathered at Azad Maidan in south Mumbai had planned to encircle the Vidhan Sabha building, the state’s legislative assembly, on March 12. After a week-long march that started in Nashik on March 6 , the gherao of the assembly building was to have been the culmination of the protest. But the government seemed to have realised the depth and extent of the support the morcha was receiving, and offered to negotiate on the afternoon of March 12.
The farmers were exhausted after the arduous trek in blistering heat (see From farm and forest: Long March to Mumbai and Long March: blistered feet unbroken spirit), some were annoyed by the many cameras – and they were also uncertain and anxious. “Let us see what happens,” many told me during the four-hour meeting between leaders of the Akhil Bharatiya Kisan Sabha, the organisers of the march, and representatives of the state government. The farmers waited patiently from 12:30 to 4:30 p.m., while the meeting was underway at Mantralaya.
An 11-member delegation of farm leaders, including Ajit Nawale, general secretary of the Kisan Sabha, Ashok Dhawale president of the Kisan Sabha, and J.P. Gavit, member of the legislative assembly from Surgana taluka in Nashik district, met a six-member government panel with their demands.



