“Delhi metro services will be regulated on November 26 from morning to 2 pm through loops,” said DMRC.
See: Drone camera deployed for security surveillance on the Delhi-Faridabad (Haryana) border, in full view of farmers ” From… https://t.co/G1DFXidx2w
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On Wednesday, Delhi police rejected all requests from farmers’ organizations to hold protests in the capital against the central government’s new agricultural laws. Legal action will be taken against those who violate the guidelines of the Delhi Disaster Management Authority. Farmers from Punjab and Haryana had called for a “Chalo Dilli” march, declaring that they would reach the apital on Thursday via five roads.
Eish Singhal, a spokesman for the Delhi police, said that farmers’ organizations had applied for permission to hold protests on November 26 and 27. “They were told that they could ask for permission again when the condition improved,” he added. Barricades have been erected at the borders to prevent their entry.
On the yellow line, which connects Delhi to Gurugram, there will be no services available between Sultanpur and Guru Dronacharya stations and trains will run from Samaypur Badli to Sultanpur and Guru Dronacharya to downtown Huda. On the blue line, there will be no services from New Ashok Nagar to downtown Noida and from Anand Vihar to Vaishali until 2pm.
On the Magenta Line, there will be no services available from Jasola Vihar Shaheen Bagh to the Botanical Garden, although regular services from Janakpuri West to Jasola Vihar Shaheen Bagh would be available. On the Red Line, services will not be available between Dilshad Garden and Major Mohit Sharma Rajender Nagar stations.
There will be no services available from Tikri Kalan to the Brig Hoshiar Singh section of the Green Line until 2pm. On the Violet Line, which connects Faridabad and Ballabgarh, there will be no services available from the Badarpur border to the Mewala Maharajpur section. Trains will run from Kashmere Gate to Badarpur Border and Mewala Maharajpur to Raja Nahar Singh.
Regular services will continue to be available on the Pink, Gray, Airport Express and Rapid Metro lines during this period.
At Gurugram, heavy barricades and intense checkpoints will likely slow traffic, including the Delhi-Gurugram highway, on Thursday and Friday. Gurugram police said seven entry points into the city had been sealed off. Intense checks and traffic diversions will begin at 4 a.m. Thursday. More than 1,000 police officers have been deployed for this purpose.
Meanwhile, even as the Haryana government detained more than 70 farmer leaders to quell the protests, hundreds of peasants took to the streets on Wednesday to mobilize more people for the march and help their counterparts trapped in Punjab’s sealed borders. -Haryana.
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