Farmers reject relief package
SUKKUR: Farmers rejected the Prime Minister’s agriculture relief package, saying it will not give any benefit to the common peasant. The famers, speaking at ‘the 8th Peasants Conference’ in village Sabul Khaskheli in Ghotki district, said the government is reluctant to provide subsidies on inputs and fertiliser and tube well
By Imtiaz Hussain
November 13, 2015
SUKKUR: Farmers rejected the Prime Minister’s agriculture relief package, saying it will not give any benefit to the common peasant.
The famers, speaking at ‘the 8th Peasants Conference’ in village Sabul Khaskheli in Ghotki district, said the government is reluctant to provide subsidies on inputs and fertiliser and tube well loans.
Peasants from Sindh, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa attended the conference, organised by the Pakistan Kissan Mazdoor Tehreeq.
They demanded of the government 60 percent subsidies on tractor, seeds and fertilisers.
The speakers said exploitation of the farmers’ community is increasing day by day.
They said mismanagement issues and bad governance, especially in Sindh, ruined the agricultural sector. Farmers’ leaders, including Azra Saeed, Mustafa Balouch and Allo Bheel, said shortage of irrigation water rendered thousands of acres of fertile lands barren.
They said there is no water reservoir policy. At least 70 percent tube wells in Sindh are out of order. The government is doing nothing considerable to tackle water logging and salinity.
The famers, speaking at ‘the 8th Peasants Conference’ in village Sabul Khaskheli in Ghotki district, said the government is reluctant to provide subsidies on inputs and fertiliser and tube well loans.
Peasants from Sindh, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa attended the conference, organised by the Pakistan Kissan Mazdoor Tehreeq.
They demanded of the government 60 percent subsidies on tractor, seeds and fertilisers.
The speakers said exploitation of the farmers’ community is increasing day by day.
They said mismanagement issues and bad governance, especially in Sindh, ruined the agricultural sector. Farmers’ leaders, including Azra Saeed, Mustafa Balouch and Allo Bheel, said shortage of irrigation water rendered thousands of acres of fertile lands barren.
They said there is no water reservoir policy. At least 70 percent tube wells in Sindh are out of order. The government is doing nothing considerable to tackle water logging and salinity.
-
Is Elon Musk Set To Become First Trillionaire In 2026? Market Odds Explained -
Prince Harry’s Protective Stance On Meghan Markle Sparked Rift With William, Charles -
How BTS Push Through Performances As They Gear For 2026 Comeback -
AI Copyright Battle: ByteDance To Curb Seedance 2.0 Amid Disney Lawsuit Warning -
Savannah Guthrie In Tears As She Makes Desperate Plea To Mom's Kidnappers -
Canada’s Defence Industrial Strategy Targets 125,000 Jobs And Export Growth -
Tre Johnson, Former NFL Guard And Teacher, Passes Away At 54 -
Jerome Tang Calls Out Team After Embarrassing Home Defeat -
Cynthia Erivo Addresses Bizarre Rumour About Her Relationship With Ariana Grande -
Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Spotted Cosying Up At NBA All-Star Game -
Lady Gaga Explains How Fibromyalgia Lets Her 'connect With People Who Have It' -
Metro Detroit Weather Forecast: Is The Polar Vortex Coming Back? -
Daniel Radcliffe Reveals Surprising Way Fatherhood Changed Him -
‘Disgraced’ Andrew At Risk Of Breaking Point As Epstein Scandal Continues -
Alan Cumming Shares Plans With 2026 Bafta Film Awards -
OpenClaw Founder Peter Steinberger Hired By OpenAI As AI Agent Race Heats Up