Belagavi (PTI): Karnataka Minister H K Patil on Wednesday invited representatives of sugarcane farmers, who are protesting demanding that the government fix a fair price of Rs 3,500 per tonne for their crops, for a meeting with Chief Minister Siddaramaiah in Bengaluru.

However, not willing to meet the CM in Bengaluru, farmers' representatives said that they would withdraw their protest if the state government announced a higher price by Thursday evening.

As the protest by farmers at Gurlapur Cross here entered the seventh day and spread across various parts of north Karnataka districts like Belagavi, Bagalkote, Haveri and others, the Law and Parliamentary Affairs minister met the farmers representatives on behalf of the government and tried to convince them to come for a discussion with the CM.

The farmers' agitation has drawn support from various farmer associations, organisations, opposition BJP, students, among others. The agitating farmers had reportedly blocked some key routes in the Belagavi region and burnt tyres and effigies as a mark of protest.

Minister Patil, after hearing the demands of the farmers, said he was ready to organise a meeting with the chief minister on Thursday evening, and come to a decision by Friday afternoon.

"On November 7 morning there will be a meeting with sugar factories, after that there will be a meeting with officials. After obtaining inputs from them, by 2 PM on November 7, we will inform you about the government's decision that will be mostly pro farmers," he said, inviting a delegation of farmers to come for a meeting.

Sri Shashikant Guruji on behalf of the farmers' said, the farmers would withdraw the protest only if the state government announced a higher price by Thursday evening.

Urging the Deputy Commissioner to hold another meeting to finalise the price, he said, based on what the DC announces after the discussion, the farmers' will withdraw their protest. "Our protest will continue."

"If we abandon the protest and go to Bengaluru to meet the chief minister, it will send a wrong message to our fellow farmers," he further said, as he hit out at district in-charge Minister Satish Jarkiholi and Minister Laxmi Hebbalkar, who hailed from Belagavi and owned sugar factories, for not meeting protesting farmers in Belagavi.

Farmers' leader Chunappa Pujari urged the government that if the factories failed to pay less than Rs 3,500 per tonne, the state government should pay the balance amount to farmers.

State BJP President B Y Vijayendra, who joined the protesting farmers in Belagavi on Tuesday, took part in the overnight agitation. Farmer leaders greeted Vijayendra, whose birthday is on Wednesday, at the protest venue.

Former Karnataka Chief Minister and BJP MP Basavaraj Bommai on Wednesday urged Chief Minister Siddaramaiah to immediately intervene and ensure that sugarcane farmers get Rs 3,500 per tonne, as demanded by them.

Suggesting that sugar factories should pay Rs 3,300 per tonne, while the state government must contribute Rs 200 per tonne to fulfill the farmers' demand, he said, as several ministers in the government have vested interests in the sugar business, the chief minister himself must take the lead and resolve the issue.

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Thiruvananthapuram (PTI): Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan on Friday paid homage to Mahatma Gandhi on his 78th death anniversary and claimed that the Sangh Parivar was still afraid of him and his memory and that is why his name was removed from the rural employment guarantee scheme.

Vijayan, in a Facebook post, said that Gandhi was killed because of his uncompromising stance on secularism and his vision of a pluralistic India that embraces diversity and disagreement.

He claimed that the Sangh Parivar was afraid of the memory of the Father of the Nation and hence his name was removed from the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme.

"Why are they still afraid of Gandhiji? The answer is simple. Gandhiji's life and vision are the exact opposite of the politics of hatred and alienation envisioned by the Sangh Parivar," the CM contended.

He further claimed that the Sangh Parivar was trying to remove Gandhi from the lives of the ordinary people.

Vijayan said that unity in diversity was "the foundation stone of the Indian Republic" and everyone should be committed to protecting it from the "totalitarian tendencies that suppress dissent".

He claimed that there were certain forces which were trying to "rewrite history and elevate communal murderers as heroes" in order to lead the country towards totalitarianism.

The Marxist veteran said that Gandhi was "not assassinated by a man named Godse, but by an embodiment of the politics of hatred promoted by the Sangh Parivar" which is still trying to attack and destroy the Constitution and the democratic values of the country.

He said that Gandhi's martyrdom was a constant call for the anti-communal struggle.

Leader of Opposition in the state assembly V D Satheesan too claimed that the Sangh Parivar was afraid of Gandhi.

In his message on Facebook paying tribute to the Father of the Nation, Satheesan said that Sangh Parivar was even afraid of the memories of Gandhi and that is why they were "erasing books and writings" to hide things from people.

He too said that the assassin of Gandhi was not just a man, but an ideology.

Satheesan said that even though the Sangh Parivar shot him down, Gandhi still lives on after his death.

Gandhi, the most prominent face of India's freedom movement, was assassinated by Nathuram Godse on this day in 1948.