Bharat Bandh: Delhi Police tightens security at border points

Highlights
- The bandh will be held from 6 am to 4 pm
- No protester is being allowed to enter Delhi
- Farmers are protesting against farm laws
A senior police officer said adequate security arrangements have been made to maintain the law and order situation and prevent any untoward incident in the national capital during the bandh.
Patrolling has been intensified, extra personnel have been deployed at the pickets especially across the border areas and every vehicle entering the national capital is being thoroughly checked, according to the police.
Tarffic Alert Due to closed of national highway no 24 and n. H. 9. By protesters Diversion is being continued inf… https://t.co/dHxAClhPMj
— Delhi Traffic Police (@dtptraffic) 1632716805000Deputy Commissioner of Police (New Delhi) Deepak Yadav said, "In view of Bharat Bandh, adequate security arrangements have been made as a precautionary measure. Pickets at the border areas have been strengthened and all vital installations, including India Gate and Vijay Chowk have adequate deployment."
No protester is being allowed to enter Delhi from the three protest sites at the city's borders, the official said.
Police personnel have been deployed on all roads leading to Delhi through villages near border areas while all vehicles are being checked at the pickets, they said.
The SKM had also asked political parties to "stand with farmers in their quest to defend principles of democracy and federalism".
"As this historic struggle completes 10 months, SKM has called Monday (September 27) to be observed as Bharat Bandh against the anti-farmer Modi government," the SKM had said in a statement.
The bandh will be held from 6 am to 4 pm during which all government and private offices, educational and other institutions, shops, industries and commercial establishments as well as public events and functions will be closed throughout the country, it had said.
Farmers from different parts of the country, especially Punjab, Haryana and western Uttar Pradesh, have been protesting at Delhi borders since November last year, demanding the repeal of the three contentious farm laws that they fear would do away with the Minimum Support Price system, leaving them at the mercy of big corporations.
The government, however, has been projecting the three laws as major agricultural reforms. Over 10 rounds of talks between the two parties have failed to break the deadlock.
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