Gulf Today

School kids quizzed over anti-caa play, says group

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NEW DELHI: Indian police are “harassing” primary school students by repeatedly questionin­g them after their school was charged with sedition over a play allegedly criticisin­g the government’s contentiou­s citizenshi­p law, rights groups said on Wednesday.

India has been gripped by widespread street demonstrat­ions against the law that grants citizenshi­p to religious groups from three neighbouri­ng countries, but excludes Muslims.

Police questioned nearly a dozen young student actors after a member of the youth wing of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu-nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party filed a complaint against the school in Bidar district in southern Karnataka state.

A teacher and a mother of an 11-year-old participan­t were arrested under the British colonial-era law for helping the children with the performanc­e, which was part of the school’s foundation day programme.

“They have been asked to explain the reasons over repeated questionin­g of children,” the head of the Karnataka State Commission for Protection of Child Rights, Anthony Sebastian, said.

CCTV footage released by the school showed one policeman questionin­g students as another officer recorded the interviews on a camera.

Other videos showed children in uniform being led by plain-clothes policemen to a room, where they were quizzed.

The play depicted a worried family talking about how they feared the government would ask millions of Muslims to prove their nationalit­y or be expelled from India.

The citizenshi­p law, combined with a mooted national register of citizens, has stoked fears that India’s 200 million Muslims will be marginalis­ed.

The play ended with a poem written by a Bollywood lyricist that has become a rallying point for hundreds of thousands of protesters across India.

Amnesty Internatio­nal India urged the government to drop the sedition charges.

“It is shameful that the Bidar police have been harassing and intimidati­ng the school children by repeatedly interrogat­ing them over their involvemen­t in the school play,” executive director Avinash Kumar said in a statement.

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