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World

India farmers protest US trade deal

  • The United States will apply a reciprocal tariff rate of 18 percent on goods from India
Published February 12, 2026 Updated February 12, 2026 05:53pm
Farmers and trade union workers shout slogans during a nationwide strike over government policies and other issues in Amritsar on February 12, 2026. Photo: AFP
Farmers and trade union workers shout slogans during a nationwide strike over government policies and other issues in Amritsar on February 12, 2026. Photo: AFP
By

NEW DELHI: Farmers rallied across India on Thursday to oppose a trade deal with Washington which reduces tariffs on US goods, warning that it would hurt Indian agriculture and endanger livelihoods.

Farmer unions have called the deal announced last week a “total surrender” to American agricultural giants, despite assurances from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government.

Waving flags and carrying banners, farmers and trade union members rallied in several cities, with minor scuffles with police reported in a few locations.

According to images shared by organisers, several thousand people took to the streets.

Main opposition leader Rahul Gandhi said he stood with the “farmers and with their struggle”.

READ MORE: Indian farm unions, opposition vow to fight India-US trade pact

“Farmers are apprehensive that trade agreements will strike a blow to their livelihood,” he said in a social media post.

Under the terms of the trade deal, India will “eliminate or reduce tariffs on all US industrial goods” and other food and agricultural products.

The United States will apply a reciprocal tariff rate of 18 percent on goods from India, including textiles and apparel, leather and footwear, plastic and rubber, organic chemicals, and certain machinery.

Modi’s government has sought to allay farmers’ concerns, insisting sensitive agricultural products, dairy and poultry have been kept out of the ambit of the deal.

The agricultural sector helps sustain over 45 percent of people in India, the world’s most populous nation, making it an influential voting bloc with formidable street power.

But individual farms are small and often unproductive, and successive Indian governments have historically intervened to protect them from foreign competition.

The protests on Thursday revived memories of months of demonstrations in 2020 and 2021, during which farmers blocked New Delhi highways and stormed the capital’s historic Red Fort complex by tractors.

That wave of protest forced the government to roll back laws aimed at reforming the sector.

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