PepsiCo withdraws one of 3 lawsuits filed against Gujarat farmers

Press Trust of India  |  Ahmedabad 

India Monday withdrew one of the lawsuits it had filed against farmers for allegedly growing a variety of for which the and claimed to have secured exclusive rights.

"The plaintiff wishes to withdraw the captioned matter relying on its discussions with the government to find a long-term and an of issues around its seed protection," told the court.

The US-based firm had filed the suit against farmers and at the for growing FC-5 variety of for which the company had claimed to have obtained plant variety protection (PVP) rights.

PepsiCo had filed the suit against the duo last month.

Altogether, 11 farmers were dragged to three different courts in for alleged infringement of rights over the particular variety of potato, with the company making damage claims of up to Rs 1 crore from each cultivator.

Apart from the two farmers in Deesa, PepsiCo had filed lawsuits against agriculturists from Sabarkantha and Aravalli districts on similar grounds.

While the other cases will come up for hearing later, this is the first of the three lawsuits for which PepsiCo has made a formal move for withdrawal.

The move comes after the company last week announced it will withdraw cases against farmers, following a meeting its executives had with officials in

Anand Yagnik, representing the farmers in the courts, maintained the withdrawal of the case "appears to be motivated and malicious".

In a statement, Yagnik demanded the "make it clear in writing about what transpired between them and PepsiCo and give assurance that it shall not allow multinational to litigate against its own farmers".

Over 190 activists had last month come out in support of the farmers and requested the to ask PepsiCo to withdraw its "false" cases.

In a letter to the Ministry of Agriculture, 194 signatories had sought financial aid and protection of rights of farmers sued for growing and selling FC-5 potato variety for which PepsiCo claimed to have obtained "exclusive rights in the country in 2016".

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, May 06 2019. 21:55 IST