Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Violence erupts in Aligarh as cops crack down on CAA stir

- HT Correspond­ent

Internet suspended amid tension as five people injured in clashes between police and protesters

AGRA: The authoritie­s were on Sunday forced to suspend Internet services in Aligarh after five people, were injured, two of them critically, in clashes between anti-citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA) protesters and police amid incidents of arson and stonethrow­ing.

District magistrate Chandra Bhushan Singh said police fired teargas shells to disperse a mob for indulging in vandalisat­ion of property and throwing stones at security personnel.

He added the internet services were suspended as a precaution­ary measure. Singh said the violence broke out when police were trying to evict some women protesters holding a sit-in.

“We told them that women protesters were already holding a protest at Eidgah and they would not be permitted to hold another such protest near Kotwali,” said Singh. He added even as efforts were underway to convince the women to leave the area, the stone-throwing started.

Singh said an electricit­y department transforme­r was set afire but police managed to douse the flames before they could spread. He described the situation as “tense but under control”. “An intense patrolling of the affected areas is underway and the police are trying to trace out those who were instigatin­g the women protesters...”

Many shops, two-wheelers and police barricades were set ablaze and stone pelting was reported from Babri Mandi, Ghas-kimandi and Upperkot. News agency PTI said a 22-year-old man’s father and brother told police that he suffered bullet injury when a “miscreant” fired amid the clashes between police and protesters. Tariq, the 22-year-old, was admitted to a hospital, where doctors described his condition as “serious”.

The clashes broke out shortly after a Bhim Army-led march by hundreds of anti-caa protesters heading to the district collectora­te

earlier were stopped midway by police and Rapid Action Force.

Stopped by police, the protesters headed towards the Eidgah area in the city, where another group of anti-caa women protestors had been holding an indefinite sit-in. As the Bhim Army-led protesters, including women, were stopped by police from moving ahead after they crossed over the Katpula Bridge from the old city, they joined women protesters in the Eidgah area.

The protesters had taken out the march on a call by Bhim Army chief Chandra Shekhar. Aligarh’s senior police superinten­dent, Rajmuni, earlier told journalist­s that following the abortive march, an FIR has been lodged against three people for trying to violate prohibitor­y orders. He added he was monitoring the situation.

The CAA was passed in December to fast-track the citizenshi­p process for non-muslims, who have entered India from Afghanista­n, Pakistan, and Bangladesh before 2015. It has triggered protests as opponents of the law insist it is discrimina­tory and unconstitu­tional as it leaves out the Muslims.

With Agency Inputs)s

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