Panneerselvam had yesterday said he would inaugurate the event at Alanganallur at 10 AM.
As protesters demanded a permanent solution for holding the sport and raised slogans that Ordinance was only a temporary measure, Panneerselvam said, the "State's jallikattu Ordinance route is permanent, robust and sustainable, will be made into a law in the coming Assembly session".
The chief minister said the ordinance will be replaced by a law after bringing in a bill in the Assembly session, beginning at Chennai tomorrow.
Speaking to reporters at Madurai, Panneerselvam said, "The ban on jallikattu has been removed completely, the sport will be held at Alanganallur, on a date decided by local people."
He said jallikattu was held in all parts of Tamil Nadu with the local administration and police taking all precautionary measures to hold the sport.
Continuing blockades and agitations here and Tamukkam grounds, besides neighbouring Natham Kovilpatti in Dindigul, put a question mark over Panneerselvam inaugurating jallikattu.
Following that, Panneerselvam was expected to inaugurate jallikattu at Natham Kovilpatti in Dindigul. However, protests erupted there too making the demand for "permanent solution."
A top police official here said a group of men who were "instigating" the crowd were staging protests "for political reasons."
Madurai District AIADMK wing M G R Mandram President Muthusamy blamed the DMK, and a Left-inclined farmers body Vivasayigal Viduthalai Munnani and some ultra-Left outfits for the stalemate arising out of the continuing protests at Alanganallur. He told reporters that protesters did not want normalcy to return.
Anxiety prevailed for a while as some unidentified persons threw water packets, when talks were on. They also raised slogans that the ordinance was a temporary measure.
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