Saturday, August 29, 2015

Land Bill Will Lapse Tomorrow, I Have Agreed: Pm Modi on Mann Ki Baat

Land Bill Will Lapse Tomorrow, I Have Agreed: PM Modi on Mann Ki Baat

File photo of PM Narendra Modi.



New Delhi:  In his address to the nation on his monthly radio programme Mann ki Baat, Prime Minister Narendra Modi today said his government will allow the controversial land bill to lapse due to the opposition it faced but, but no one should be allowed to mislead the farmers.

He also invited suggestions for reforming the land acquisition law.


“Tomorrow the land bill will lapse and I have agreed to it. Due to the problems the ordinance also has been affected,” the Prime Minister said.


Taking a dig at the opposition Congress which has been fighting the land bill tooth and nail, PM Modi said many rumors have been spread about Land Acquisition Bill which have scared the farmers. “We do not want that… The government is open to any suggestion in the interest of farmers.”

He also underscored the importance the farmers’ voice holds for the government.


“Every voice is important to me but the farmers’ voice is special to me. I assure that Jai Jawan Jai Kiskan is not only a slogan, but a mantra that we will follow,” he said.


Sources had told NDTV that the government had distanced itself from the land bill in view of the coming Bihar elections. The feedback to the government was that the growing perception that the bill was anti-farmer had taken hold in the public mind and that it could prove a liability to the BJP in the coming elections.


Today, Bihar Chief minister Nitish Kumar, RJD leader Lalu Prasad and Congress chief Sonia Gandhi come on one platform today to address the “Swabhiman rally” in Patna.


The government could not pass the land bill during the monsoon session that ended on August 13.


On Friday, the government issued a statutory order to continue benefits for farmers under the 2013 Land Acquisition Act.


The statutory order includes 13 Central Acts like National Highway and Railways Acts to extend benefits to those farmers whose land is acquired under the Act, said sources.


The statutory order route was meant to do away with the need to issue the ordinance for a record fourth time.


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