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Thousands of farmers protest at Tata car plant
Thousands of angry farmers protested on Sunday outside a factory that manufactures the world's cheapest car in West Bengal state to demand the return of land they say was taken from them without proper compensation.
Kolkata: Thousands of angry farmers protested on Sunday outside a factory that manufactures the world's cheapest car in West Bengal state to demand the return of land they say was taken from them without proper compensation.
The farmers claim that Tata Motors has not paid them proper compensation for the 405 hectares the company acquired in Singur, a village 30 kilometres northwest of Kolkata, the state capital.
The land is now the site of a factory producing the Nano automobile, which is scheduled to go on sale by the end of the year for $2,500 (Dh9,175). Repeated protests, however, could delay the launch.
Nearly 3,000 armed police surrounded the factory on Sunday as thousands of farmers gathered, but no violence had been reported.
"We have water cannons ready to cope with any eventuality," said the area's superintendent of police, Rajiv Mishra.
Protesters with posters, banners and flags lined both sides of the highway leading to the factory.
Angry farmers
"We want our land back. Money cannot compensate our losses. We are farmers and we want to live by farming," said Bibekanada Das, a farmer who said he lost almost one hectare of land.
"The Tatas should bow down before people's power and return the land," Mamata Banerjee, chief of the opposition Trinamool Congress party, said as she joined the protesters.
Banerjee's party has led the fight against Tata and last week called for the company to return 160 hectares of land to the farmers.
On Friday the chairman of the Tata Group, Ratan Tata, threatened to move the factory out of West Bengal if the protests persist.
"If the state for any reason ... feels that we are exploiting them, if that is the feeling, we will exit," Tata told reporters in Kolkata.
"We can't operate the plant with police protection," he said, adding that protesters had attacked Tata employees and stolen factory equipment.
Tata did not say when he would decide whether to leave the state, and did not address how the possible move would affect Nano production.
West Bengal has been the centre of a national debate about acquiring farmland for factories in India, where about two-thirds of the more than one billion people live of agriculture.
The controversy came to a head last year when police gunned down 14 protesters in Nandigram, causing an outcry that eventually scuttled a planned special economic zone designed to draw foreign investment.
Tata has the support of the Communist government that has ruled West Bengal for three decades.
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