Bangkok Post

Rally-hit state threatens rioters with fines

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LUCKNOW: India’s northern Uttar Pradesh state is demanding millions of rupees from over 200 people and threatenin­g to confiscate their property as a penalty for damage done to public property during protests against the country’s new citizenshi­p law.

Uttar Pradesh, India’s most populous state, has suffered some of the most violent protests against India’s Citizenshi­p Amendment Act, which gives minorities who have migrated from three neighbouri­ng countries a path to citizenshi­p but doesn’t make the same concession­s for Muslims.

At least 15 of the 21 people killed in the protests have been in Uttar Pradesh, a state that has been a tinder box for tensions between the Hindu and Muslim communitie­s.

At least 230 such notices have been issued, and most of the people they had been issued to were Muslims, state government officials said yesterday.

It was unclear how many of them have been charged with rioting or other crimes, and none have been convicted. State officials have blamed much of the violence on Muslim mobs protesting against the law.

In the town of Rampur, the family of Mohammad Faheem, whose brotherin-law Mohammad Mehmood is in police custody, has received one such notice.

“Mehmood did not participat­e in a protest and was at home that day but police still arrested him,” Mr Faheem said.

Mr Mehmood, sells spices on a cart and cannot even afford a lawyer to get bail, Mr Faheem said.

“How will we pay the fine?” he asked. Authoritie­s have followed the legal procedure in assessing damage to public property as well as in issuing the notices, said Mrityunjay Kumar, a spokesman for the Uttar Pradesh government. Critics, however, said such notices are premature.

“You cannot be the complainan­t and the judge yourself,” Vikram Singh, a former head of police in Uttar Pradesh, told Reuters, adding that the state needed to appoint a competent authority to asses the damage.

“Sending notices to 100, pursuing 50 and succeeding in two will do more harm than good.”

Hundreds of thousands of people across India, including university students, have joined protests against the law, posing the biggest challenge to Prime Minister Narendra Modi since he took office in 2014.

Mr Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party controls the state government in Uttar Pradesh, and Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath, a Hindu priest, is one of the leading lights in the Hindu nationalis­t party.

Students in several Indian cities have led the protests, making use of social media to wage a parallel battle online, and India’s army chief yesterday criticised their role.

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