The Supreme Court on Tuesday stayed the implementation of three farm laws until further orders and formed a committee to hold talks with protestors, a day after the apex court said it will put a hold on the laws if the Centre would not. The court has ordered the committee to hold its first meeting within 10 days in Delhi and submit its recommendations within two months from the first sitting. However, farmers’ leaders said that while they welcome the supreme court’s decision, they will not appear before the committee. This comes as the farmers’ protest at different border points of Delhi has entered Day 48. Several farmers, majorly from Punjab and Haryana, are staying put at different border points of Delhi and are protesting in demand of complete withdrawal of the farm laws, which were passed in September last year. As of now, farmers and the central government have held eight rounds of talks, all of them which have remained inconclusive. The next round of talks between the farmer unions and the Centre will be held on January 15.