This report was first published in theprint.in and has been posted here without any alterations or editing. To read the original report, CLICK HERE

Kolkata: As the talks between a select group of farmers and Home Minister Amit Shah concluded Tuesday night, one of the union leaders caught the eye for his rather droll summation of the stalemate.

Asked by waiting journalists on what transpired at the meeting, Hannan Mollah, the 76-year-old CPI(M) politburo member and general secretary of the All India Kisan Sabha, quipped: “Kuch nahi. Murgi baethi rahi, par anda nahi diya (Nothing really. The chicken sat but laid no eggs).”

While this reply has earned him social media infamy, Mollah isn’t an unknown entity — particularly in his home state of West Bengal. And he is also no stranger to farmer movements.

In the political wilderness since 2009, Mollah, an eight-term MP from West Bengal’s Uluberia Lok Sabha constituency, has a reputation of reviving and aiding farmer protests and movements across the country.

In 2018, he had launched the Kisan Long March in West Bengal but that didn’t go anywhere. Now, however, he is slowly becoming the prominent face of the farmer agitation against the three controversial laws passed by the Modi government.

Speaking to ThePrint, Mollah insisted that the farmers’ agitation isn’t confined to only those from Punjab and Haryana. “This is of course a national movement. It is the ruling party at centre that tries to portray it as a Punjab-Haryana centred movement. But it is not,” he said. “The success of the Bharat Bandh call reflects its reach. If the government does not repeal this act, it will soon feel the tremors from all parts of the country.”

Mollah also added that the farmers would not go back with “half-baked” solutions this time, and that there would be no retreat until “the black farmer acts are repealed”.

“We have not received the letter about the proposed amendments as of now,” he told ThePrint Wednesday morning. “But we do not need amendments. We would not agree to anything short of withdrawal of the acts.”

By Wednesday evening, the farmers did just that. They rejected the Modi government’s proposed amendments to the new agricultural laws, reiterating that nothing short of a repeal is acceptable to them.

The leader bridging the divide 

Despite his political antecedents, Mollah has been embraced by the protesters. Surinder Singh, the Kisan Sabha’s Rohtak secretary, told ThePrint that this is due to the fact that he is present in most such agitations.

“From the land acquisition bill, the Mandsaur agitation to the current farmer protests, Hannan Mollah is the one who helped make these movements broad based and acquire a national character,” Singh said.

“In the ongoing farmer agitation, under the umbrella of the All India Kisan Sangharsh Coordination Committee (AIKSCC), Hannan brought together unions from different parts of the country — not just from Punjab,” Singh added. “He has made farmer agitations broad-based in the last few years and ensured that they are not sidelined.”

Avik Saha, general secretary, AIKSCC, told ThePrint that Mollah’s nature has endeared him to the protesters.

“He’s the most soft spoken of all the farmer leaders and has an amazing grasp of the issue as he has been a farmer leader for 40 years,” Saha said.

“He knows farmer politics and farmer agitations. While he represents the AIKSCC, he’s universally respected despite all the differences that the farmer organisations have. His position is far above his party. As things are coming to boil, he’s the voice of sanity in this movement.”

The CPM MP-turned-farmer leader

The son of a jute-mill worker from West Bengal’s Howrah district, Hannan Mollah joined the CPI(M) as a 16-year-old in the 1960s.

Mollah had his early education in a madrasa in Howrah’s Chengail but completed his education at the prestigious Presidency College (now University) in Kolkata.

He made it to the state CPI(M) committee in 1980 and almost three decades later, was inducted into the politburo, the party’s apex decision-making body, in 2015.

In between, Mollah held the Uluberia Lok Sabha constituency for eight terms between 1980 and 2009.

Since he lost the 2009 elections, however, Mollah has taken a backseat from party activities. He also had a fallout with party leaders after he expressed his displeasure over the land acquisition process in Singur in 2008.

Senior Kolkata-based political analyst Samir Das told ThePrint that Mollah had almost been forgotten even in West Bengal.

“Mollah almost became a non-entity in Bengal after he lost to Trinamool’s Sultan Ahmed in Uluberia in 2009. He is more known as the general secretary of AIKS,” Das said. “He is believed to be close to CPI(M) general secretary Sitaram Yechury but if he identifies too much with his party, he will lose steam as the leader of the farmers movement.”

(With inputs from Sravasti Dasgupta)

Courtesy: theprint.in

Let the Truth be known. If you read VB and like VB, please be a VB Supporter and Help us deliver the Truth to one and all.



New Delhi, Apr 28: Arvinder Singh Lovely on Sunday said he has only resigned as chief of the Congress' Delhi unit and is not joining any other political party.

His clarification came after Congress ex-MLA Asif Mohammad Khan claimed that the BJP would field Lovely from the East Delhi constituency, replacing Harsh Malhotra.

"I have only resigned as Delhi Congress chief and I am not joining any political party," he said at a press conference at his residence.

Lovely said his resignation reflected the pain of Congress workers saddened by the fact that the "ideals they had been fighting for during the last seven to eight years" were being compromised.

"We are fighting the elections together but never did the Congress workers say that we are giving a clean chit to them or giving them credit for building schools and hospitals, which is far from the reality," Lovely said, referring to the party's tie-up with the AAP in Delhi for the Lok Sabha polls.

"Those who are saying that I have resigned out of anger over ticket (distribution), it is not like that. You all know that I introduced the candidates by holding a press conference three days ago," Lovely said.

Earlier in the day, AAP leader Saurabh Bharadwaj asked in a post in Hindi on X, without naming anyone, if the BJP was changing its candidate for East Delhi.

Questioned about Bharadwaj's post and whether it hinted at him joining the BJP, Lovely said he only resigned as the Delhi Congress chief.

"Thanks for Bharadwaj's wishes. I think he takes decisions on behalf of all other parties. I have just cleared to you that I resigned from the post of Delhi Pradesh Congress Committee president," Lovely said.

In a setback to the Congress ahead of the Lok Sabha polls, Lovely resigned as the party's Delhi unit chief, citing the alliance with the AAP as one of the reasons.

He said the Congress' Delhi unit was against the alliance but the party high command went ahead with it.

"The Delhi Congress unit was against an alliance with a party which was formed on the sole basis of levelling false, fabricated and mala fide corruption charges against the Congress party ... half of the cabinet ministers (of the party) are presently in jail on corruption charges," Lovely said in his resignation letter sent to Congress chief Mallikarjun Kharge on Saturday.

"Despite that, the party (Congress) made a decision to ally with the AAP in Delhi. We respected the party's final decision ... I even went to the extent of visiting Mr (Arvind) Kejriwal's residence on the night of his arrest along with Mr Subash Chopra and Mr Sandeep Dikshit, despite the same being against my position on the matter," he said.

The Congress is contesting the Lok Sabha elections in an alliance with AAP in Delhi. As part of its seat-share arrangement, the Congress is contesting from three seats while AAP has fielded candidates from four constituencies in the national capital.

Lovely had resigned as chief of the Congress' Delhi unit in 2015, taking moral responsibility for the party's worst-ever performance in the assembly elections.

The Congress had failed to win a single seat in the 70-member House as AAP swept to victory in 67 constituencies and the BJP won three.

Lovely contested the Lok Sabha elections in 2019 from East Delhi against the BJP's Gautam Gambhir and AAP candidate Atishi, securing 24 per cent votes.

Gambhir won the seat by 3.93 lakh votes ahead of Lovely in second.

Delhi's seven Lok Sabha seats will go to the polls in the sixth phase on May 25.