Briefing reporters after the party's state executive meeting here today, INLD senior leader Abhay Singh Chautala said his party workers will also stop the Punjab government vehicles entering Haryana on the day.
He said although private vehicles from Punjab will be allowed, the motorists will be given a rose and a copy of the memorandum containing the INLD's demands on the SYL issue.
The apex court has posted the hearing on the water sharing dispute on July 11.
The INLD leader also hit out at the Punjab unit of the BJP for throwing its weight behind the Amarinder Singh-led Congress government on the SYL issue.
On being asked about their protest venue, Chautala said it would be either around Rajpura-Ambala border or on the Ambala-Delhi National Highway 1.
Chautala had two months ago tried to march to Punjab from near Shambhu barrier on Haryana-Punjab border to undertake the digging of the SYL canal, but was arrested for breaching prohibitory orders. However, he along with other INLD leaders were later released by the Punjab Police.
Over a month ago, hundreds of INLD supporters from Haryana had flooded the Parliament Street in the heart of the national capital to protest over the SYL canal issue, prompting police to resort to lathicharge.
The controversial 1981 water-sharing agreement came into being after Haryana was carved out of Punjab in 1966.
For effective allocation of water, the SYL canal link was conceptualised and both the states were required to construct their portions within their territories.
Haryana constructed the portion of SYL canal in its territory. However, Punjab, after the initial phase, stopped the work, leading to a spate of litigations.
In 2004, the Congress government in the state came out with the Punjab Termination of Agreement Act with an intention to terminate the 1981 agreement and all other pacts relating to sharing of waters of rivers Ravi and Beas.
Punjab challenged the verdict by filing an original suit that was rejected in 2004 by the Supreme Court which asked the Centre to take over the remaining infrastructural work of the SYL canal project.
Chautala also demanded Rs 25,000 compensation for wheat crop per acre in case of fire.
He hit out at the BJP-led state government in Haryana over its "failure to lift mustard crops in time, following which the farmers had to sell off their crops for about Rs 3,200 a quintal below the minimum support price (MSP) of Rs 3,700."
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