Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Nine killed in UP as CAA stir escalates

CURBS TIGHTENED Internet services suspended, force deployment scaled up

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

LUCKNOW: At least nine people died in clashes with the police as violence over the passage of the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act spread to 14 locations across Uttar Pradesh on Friday, taking the national death toll in the protests over the newly enacted law to 17 so far.

Three people died in Meerut, two in Bijnor, and one each in Varanasi, Ferozabad, Sambhal and Kanpur on Friday. Three people, one in Lucknow and two in Karnataka’s Mangalore, were killed on Thursday. Five deaths have been reported from Assam in the agitation so far.

An eight-year-old boy died in Varanasi on Friday after a lathicharg­e by police led to a stampede. Uttar Pradesh director general of police (DGP), OP Singh, said at least 50 policemen were also injured across the state in “heavy” stone pelting by protesters returning from Friday prayers at mosques.

The Uttar Pradesh Police, in anticipati­on of possible trouble on Friday, placed around 3,305 people under house arrest and took another 200 into preventive custody. The administra­tion also imposed section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which prohibits unlawful assembly of more than five people, in at least 16 districts of India’s largest state. Police also denied permission for any protest against the CAA or the police action in Delhi’s Jamia Millia Islamia and Aligarh Muslim University. Starting Friday morning, mobile internet services were also suspended in many parts of the state.

What the police did not anticipate was the turnout. A senior police officer in Lucknow said that he had never seen so many people coming out to protest at several locations at the same time. “In Kanpur, the procession

was about four kilometres long and we had no option but to allow the protest,” he said.

One academic suggested that the scale and intensity of protests show that the issue wasn’t just CAA. The protests were more against a possible National Register of Citizens (NRC) exercise across India, said Roop Rekha Verma, a former vicechance­llor of Lucknow University. “There is a feeling among the Muslim community of being alienated by the ruling party on various issues and the economic slowdown has also impacted them a lot,” he said. Other experts said a legislatio­n making instant triple talaq a cognizable offence, and the Supreme

Court’s verdict on a Ram temple in Ayodhya may have also contribute­d to their angst.

Uttar Pradesh Police officials said the pattern of violence was the same across locations: Larger-than-expected procession­s that started off peacefully, but then turned violent with protesters hurling stones at policemen and destroying public property, forcing a reaction. The state police also denied firing on protesters.

“At several places, the mob fired on us during which people may have got bullet injuries. This is a matter of investigat­ion,” said OP Singh.

Kanpur senior superinten­dent of police Anant Deo said protesters in Kanpur were dispersed through a “baton charge”.

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