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Left Front to support Govt which will secure land for farmers: Buddha

After having faced flakes on the issue of farmland acquisition at Nandigram and Singur, West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee on Sunday said the Left Front would like to install a government at the Centre which would secure land and bank loans for farmers.

Updated on: May 10, 2009 01:17 PM IST
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After having faced flakes on the issue of farmland acquisition at Nandigram and Singur, West Bengal Chief Minister Buddhadeb Bhattacharjee on Sunday said the Left Front would like to install a government at the Centre which would secure land and bank loans for farmers.

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HT Image

"We want a government at the Centre which will secure land for farmers, bank loans for farmers. It is only the Left and like-minded parties that can give such a government at the Centre," Bhattacharjee said at an election rally in the prestigious South Kolkata Lok Sabha constituency which is held by Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee.

Claiming that neither the BJP nor the Congress can ensure welfare of the poor of the country, he said, "The country's politics is in such a state that it now seems practical that we will be able to defeat not only the BJP, but also the Congress to form a new government with a new policy."

"A chance has come to turn the country around," Bhattacharjee said.

He attacked Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, claiming that he had failed the country by neglecting poor farmers and that the central government's apathy had led to hundreds of suicide in Vidharbha and other places.

Criticising the Centre for the Indo-US nuclear deal, over which the Left had parted ways with the Congress-led UPA government, he said, "Manmohan Singh has tied the hands and legs of our country with America. We will never agree to close ties with the US."

"I can't think that a prime minister of our country can say 'Indians love President Bush'. Even the British Prime Minister could not say that," Bhattacharjee said.

On the Nano's exit from Singur to enter Sanand in Gujarat, he said the people of Singur had been deprived of a lifetime opportunity to change their lives forever, but a mindless agitation put paid to their chance.

"But I will not bow down. I will decide on what industry will come up at Singur after the Lok Sabha elections," he said.

The Tatas had left Singur over a stalemate between the government and the opposition Trinamool Congress on the latter's demand for return of 400 acres of land to unwilling land-owners of the total 997 acres acquired.

 
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