Bharatiya Kisan Union Under Scanner For Receiving Foreign Funds For Farmers Protests

Supported by

The Bharatiya Kisan Union (Ekta Ugrahan), the most prominent independent organisation behind the farmers’ protests, has been asked to furnish the registration details that permit it to seek foreign funds, Hindustan Times reported.

This comes after the association, on December 6, had made a public appeal seeking financial help to continue the farmers’ protests against the centre’s three contentious farm laws.

The organisation has collected nearly Rs 8 lakh in the last two months in the personal bank account of Kokrikalan.

‘A department under the Centre has sent an email which we received through our bank’s branch in Punjab,’ General Secretary Sukhdev Singh Kokrikalan said. ‘In the email, it was stated that we should give registration details in respect of these donations from abroad otherwise they will be sent back. The bank manager showed me the email which has been sent by the Forex Department.’

However, Kokrikalan confirmed that his bank account was not registered as per the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, and that the forex department of Punjab and Sindh Bank received the notice on the foreign funds.

The farmers’ union criticised the government’s actions and said they were being targeted.

‘BKU is being targeted by the central authorities for evoking a massive response from Indians and NRIs,’ group’s President Joginder Singh Ugrahan said. ‘What wrong is there if our supporters working as truck drivers or pursuing other labour works send donations from overseas?’

The organisation also questioned the timing of the government’s concerns on foreign funding, adding that the administration was ‘using all tactics as their sole purpose is to defeat the agitation’.

Ugrahan said that the income tax department first conducted raids on ‘arhtiyas [commission agents]’ as they supported the farmers’ protests, and now their organisation is being targetted.

‘They are asking details about NRI funds,’ he said. ‘The NRIs from Punjab help us with donations from their hard-earned money. They are supporting our agitation, what is the problem in that? Back home too, people support us.’

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh had said that the use of tax laws on farmer groups was the government’s way to break the farmers’ protest. Calling it ‘vendetta politics’, the CM said it is obvious that having failed to ‘persuade, mislead and divide the farmers’ into ending their protest, the government is now trying to weaken their struggle.

Also Read: Fake Call Centre Busted In Delhi, Police Arrest 42 For Duping Foreign Nationals

#PoweredByYou We bring you news and stories that are worth your attention! Stories that are relevant, reliable, contextual and unbiased. If you read us, watch us, and like what we do, then show us some love! Good journalism is expensive to produce and we have come this far only with your support. Keep encouraging independent media organisations and independent journalists. We always want to remain answerable to you and not to anyone else.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Featured

Amplified by

P&G Shiksha

P&G Shiksha Turns 20 And These Stories Say It All

Amplified by

Isha Foundation

Sadhguru’s Meditation App ‘Miracle of Mind’ Hits 1 Million Downloads in 15 Hours, Surpassing ChatGPT’s Early Growth

Recent Stories

Fact‑Check: What the ₹1.25 Cr Figure After the Air India Tragedy Really Means

Mumbai School Teacher and Accomplice Arrested for Repeated Sexual Assault of 16-Year-Old Student in Hotels Over a Year

Rajasthan’s Padampura Village Protects 700-Year-Old Neem Grove, Setting Model for Grassroots Conservation

Contributors

Writer : 
Editor : 
Creatives :