Oman Daily Observer

India cuts off phones in Delhi as protests rage nationwide

Major airline cancels flights from Delhi because of traffic disruption in the city

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NEW DELHI: Indian authoritie­s cut cellphone access in parts of Delhi on Thursday and fresh violence erupted elsewhere, as thousands of protestors nationwide defied bans on assembly in growing anger at a new citizenshi­p law.

Police and demonstrat­ors clashed in Uttar Pradesh state as security forces bundled demonstrat­ors including an internatio­nally famous historian onto buses in Delhi and Bangalore, as 19 metro stations were shut in the capital and major roads blocked.

Country’s biggest airline by market share, has cancelled 19 flights from Delhi as road traffic disruption in the capital city has affected the availabili­ty of its crew, a Delhi airport official said on Thursday. A further 16 flights are delayed.

“Due to traffic restrictio­ns and to accommodat­e passengers reaching late to the airport, we have reschedule­d and curtailed our schedule in and out of Delhi by approximat­ely 20 departures,” Indigo said in a statement.

The new law eases citizenshi­p rules for people fleeing persecutio­n from three neighbouri­ng countries, but excludes Muslims, stoking accusation­s that Prime Minister Narendra Modi wants to reshape India as a Hindu nation and creating unease abroad.

Seven months after Modi swept to a second term, India has seen a week of protests in which four people were shot dead, dozens injured and hundreds arrested, while authoritie­s have banned gatherings in areas that together are home to hundreds of millions of people.

They included all of Uttar Pradesh and Bangalore, areas of the northeast and parts of Bihar, New Delhi, Hyderabad and Chennai. All of them have seen protests in recent days, and in the case of the capital, riots and police storming a university.

Delhi police spokesman M S Randhawa said that “people should seek permission to assemble at places” where the ban is not in place.

DEMONSTRAT­ORS DRAGGED Fresh violence erupted in the Samhbal district of Uttar Pradesh as hundreds of protesters set fire to vehicles and threw stones at security forces who responded with tear gas, local police chief Yamuna Prasad said.

“We are trying to control the situation. People have been asked to return to their homes,” Prasad said.

Police fired tear gas in state capital Lucknow while in Modi’s home state of Gujarat police said they batoncharg­ed demonstrat­ors and arrested 50 people.

As others ignored the assembly ban in Delhi and elsewhere, authoritie­s ordered telecom firms to cut calls, text messages and data in parts of the city.

India is already the world leader in cutting the Internet, activists say, and online access was also restricted in parts of Uttar Pradesh.

Kawalpreet Kaur, Delhi President of the All India Students’ Associatio­n, tweeted that police had filled 14 buses with detainees at the Red Fort landmark in Delhi.

“But more and more people are pouring in, too many to be detained,” she added.

In Bangalore one of those dragged onto a police bus was globally renowned historian Ramachandr­a Guha just as he was giving an interview.

In the northeast, where the protests began last week around 20,000 people took to the streets. No violence was reported however after last week’s deadly clashes.

But the day’s biggest demonstrat­ion so far took place in Malegaon in Maharashtr­a state — no assembly ban was in place — with as many as 60,000 people, police said. “It was all peaceful,” spokespers­on ASI Pathan said. — AFP

Police fired tear gas in state capital Lucknow while in Modi’s home state of Gujarat police said they baton-charged demonstrat­ors and arrested 50 people

 ?? — Reuters/afp ?? Indians defied bans on assembly on Thursday in cities nationwide as anger swells against a citizenshi­p law.
— Reuters/afp Indians defied bans on assembly on Thursday in cities nationwide as anger swells against a citizenshi­p law.

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