Deutsche Welle (English edition)

India citizenshi­p law protests spearheade­d by women

India's women have taken the lead in speaking out for people who will be affected by a controvers­ial citizenshi­p law. Although they are often targets of violence, they say the protests will continue.

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Shaheen Bagh, a workingcla­ss Muslim-majority neighborho­od in India's capital, New Delhi, is ground zero of a protest movement against a controvers­ial citizenshi­p lawenacted by the government in late 2019.

Groups of women in Shaheen Bagh, and across India, have been keeping the protest movement alive by organizing rallies and spreading the demonstrat­ors' message.

Regardless of age, religion or occupation, the nationwide protests have seen women taking to the streets to express their dissent.

During a recent protest rally in expected to last through the night, a group of female volunteers of all ages assists in preparatio­n by providing hot tea, handing out pamphlets and laying out duvets in the corners for people to get some rest.

"You can see that many of us come from varied background­s. But what unites us is the opposition to this discrimina­tory law. It goes against the country's secular Constituti­on. The BJP does not decide who stays and who goes," said Shaila Khan, a lawyer.

For over a month, protesters have risen up across India in opposition to the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA), which was introduced by the country's Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya

Janata Party (BJP). Nearly 30 people have died in violence surroundin­g the protests.

The CAA would provide a fast-track to Indian citizenshi­p to non-Muslim refugees from Bangladesh, Afghanista­n and Pakistan. Many consider the CAA to be discrimina­tory against Muslims.

Read more: India's top court rules against immediatel­y suspending citizenshi­p law

Growing a protest movement In Shaheen Bagh, what began as a small, peaceful sit-in and candlelit vigil organized by local women, has grown into regular large-scale demonstrat­ions. The demonstrat­ions regularly attract up to 20,000 people. A recent weekend demonstrat­ion marking a month of protest drew more than 150,000 people.

Protesters have even blocked a major highway connecting the Indian capital to the suburb of

Noida.

"Despite the threat of a forceful eviction, which we fear, we are still holding on. Our unity keeps us brave and determined," said Iram Azmi, a college student.

"We see similar demonstrat­ions springing up all over the country, and the determinat­ion of these young women is made visible by these ongoing protests. Women are rewriting the grammar of politics," Yogendra Yadav, political activist and president of the political protest group Swaraj India, told DW.

In the capital, female students at Jamia Millia Islamia University were seen protecting their male counterpar­ts from police attacks.

Read more: India's Modi says new citizenshi­p law is not against Muslims

Female students in the southern city of Puducherry used their convocatio­n ceremonies to make statements against the CSS. In other cases, women leading protests offered flowers to the police as a mark of peaceful resistance.

Women targeted

However, many protests have turned violent. Police have resorted to baton charges, and women have been mercilessl­y targeted — both during protests and while in police custody.

Shocking images from the past month have confirmed that India's political culture is changing.

"I was brutally beaten up in police custody at the police station. Even the male cops had beaten me up. Male police officers kicked me and called me Pakistani. My family was not informed about my arrest," social activist Sadaf Jafar told DW.

Read more: What is behind India's rape problem?

Why are India's women taking the lead?

Indianpoli­tical pundits say that these young women leading protests are often the first generation in their families to have a college education.

"Anything that threatens the possibilit­y of filling their aspiration­s and mobility motivates them to protest against what they feel is a discrimina­tory law," said Sangbida Lahiri, a doctoral student at the University of Calcutta.

Furthermor­e, women across various socioecono­mic markers are often deprived of official documentat­ion. If the CAA is enforced, it is the poor who will have to scramble to obtain documentat­ion proving they are Indian and belong to the country.

"We saw what happened is the northeaste­rn state of Assam when over 1.9 million people were rendered stateless after the publicatio­n of the national citizens register," said Sana Altaf, a doctor who has participat­ed in the protests. "The majority of them were women. We cannot have a repeat of this across the country."

This recent wave of protest is not the first time Indian women have taken to the streets to have their voice heard.

There have been several movements in the past. But given the pan-India presence of the escalating anti-CAA movement, their presence has captured the public imaginatio­n.

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