Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

CAPITAL, INTERRUPTE­D Three killed as protests break out nationwide

Internet blocked, 20 Metro stations shut, Section 144 imposed in heart of Delhi Demonstrat­ors taken in buses, dropped at stadiums, enclosures in the Capital’s outskirts

- HT Correspond­ents HT Correspond­ents

Some political parties are fuelling protests. They are inciting people in the name of religion.

G KISHAN REDDY, MOS, home affairs

NEW DELHI: Police enforced an unpreceden­ted crackdown in large parts of the Capital on Thursday — ordering a prohibitio­n on assembly, switching off mobile connectivi­ty, shutting down Metro stations, and detaining people who defied the ban on demonstrat­ions — to quell protests against a new citizenshi­p law that has roiled India.

The restrictio­ns led to people going without mobile phone services for four hours in the city, a first, being forced to disembark three Metro stations before their destinatio­n and walking to offices in central Delhi, and stuck for nine hours in the worst traffic snarl in Gurugram since 2016.

Thousands of people still swamped the streets on a grey misty morning and demanded the government roll back the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, or CAA, which opens an easy route to naturalisa­tion for “persecuted minorities” from three Muslimmajo­rity countries.

Within an hour of people gathering at 9am, columns of police personnel started bundling protesters into buses outside Red Fort and Mandi House, transporti­ng scenes of crowd control measures familiar in the country’s restive frontier states to the heart of India’s Capital. Television visuals showed protesters being dragged into buses and dropped off in the outer fringes of the city.

Section 144, which prevents the assembly of four or more people, was clamped from Red Fort in north Delhi to Bahadur Shah

Zafar Marg in the south; Seelampur in north-east Delhi to Mayur Vihar in the east; and the New Delhi area.

Many officers admitted that this was the first time in at least three decades — going back to the 1984 anti-sikh riots — that prohibitor­y orders were issued for such a large area in Delhi.

At least 20 metro stations spanning the length and breadth of Delhi — from Vishwavidy­alaya in the north to Central Secretaria­t in central Delhi and Munirka in the south — were shut down between 9am and 7pm. Even the arterial Rajiv Chowk station, which handles around 300,000 passengers daily, was closed for four hours.

Police also ordered four major service providers — Airtel, Vodaphone-idea, Reliance Jio and MTNL — to switch off internet, messaging and voice call services in parts of north, central, northeast and south-east Delhi at 9am. This is the first time that the measure – currently enforced across some parts in five states, especially in Assam – was implemente­d in the city. Services were restored after 1pm.

According to an annual study of Freedom House, a Us-based non-profit research organisati­on, India is the country with the worst record of government­mandated internet shutdowns in the world — including a fourmonth-long suspension of services in Kashmir since August.

Police barricaded the Delhigurug­ram highway early on Thursday morning, triggering a major traffic jam that cost many commuters up to nine hours on the road and forced airlines to cancel 19 flights because both passengers and flight crew were stuck on the road.

Another 250 flights were affected. The ensuing jam was the worst since the so-called Guru Jam that lasted 20 hours in 2016 and forced authoritie­s to implement major traffic and infrastruc­ture changes.

Police said the restrictio­ns were needed to prevent violence seen at two previous demonstrat­ions in Seelampur and Jamia Nagar.

On Sunday, a mob torched buses in south Delhi and police using tear gas on protesters gathered near Jamia Millia Islamia. At least 21 people were injured and 20 vehicles damaged when a protest of around 2,000 people turned violent in Seelampur on Tuesday.

Delhi Police spokespers­on, MS Randhawa, said the telecommun­ication services were temporaril­y suspended to prevent fake messages. “We had inputs that some outsiders were spreading rumours to mobilise crowd. We are monitoring social media posts and will take action against rumour mongers,” he added.

But protesters, many of whom walked back or hitched rides to Jantar Mantar from outer Delhi, contended that the orders were aimed at muzzling dissent. “It is shameful how the government wants to suppress any form of dissent. They want to turn the Capital into Kashmir,” said JNU Students’ Union president Aishe Ghosh.

BENGALURU/LUCKNOW: Two people were killed in Mangaluru in Karnataka after protests turned violent, while large-scale agitation resulted in the death of one person in Uttar Pradesh capital Lucknow on Thursday as demonstrat­ors across states took to the streets against the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act (CAA).

Hundreds were detained as protesters defied prohibitor­y orders of Section 144, imposed across states, even as demonstrat­ions in West Bengal, Maharashtr­a, Bihar, Kerala and the North-east remained largely peaceful.

Noted historian Ramachandr­a Guha, who was part of the protest at the Town Hall in Bengaluru, was among those briefly detained by the police on Thursday.

Guha hit out at the current Bharatiya Janata Party-led administra­tion for using a colonial-era law to “supress dissent and stifle differing voices” and alleged that the government was diverting “attention from a sinking economy”.

The Karnataka government also suspended internet services in Mangalore city and Dakshin Kannada district for 48 hours, beginning 10pm on December 19.

Uttar Pradesh CM Yogi Adityanath appealed for peace in the wake of violent protests. In the state capital, police resorted to lathicharg­e, fired tear gas shells and used water cannons to control the situation.

Protesters also clashed with police and dozens of vehicles were set ablaze or damaged during the violence. The UP police also denied the allegation that Mohammad Wakeel’s death was connected to the protests.

 ?? PTI ?? Police personnel stand guard at the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act protest at Red Fort on Thursday.
PTI Police personnel stand guard at the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act protest at Red Fort on Thursday.
 ??  ?? A TV news channel’s van on fire during a protest in Lucknow on Thursday.
A TV news channel’s van on fire during a protest in Lucknow on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India