Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Friday prayers emerge as sites of support, protest gatherings

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

THOUSANDS GATHERED OUTSIDE HARI MASJID IN MUMBAI TO PROTEST AGAINST CAA AND NRC. PEOPLE JOINED THE PROTEST AFTER THE PRAYERS AT MOSQUE

NEWDELHI:The Friday namaz at various mosques across the country emerged as points of congregati­on that transforme­d into protests against the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, or CAA, as police in several cities banned public gatherings in a bid to stop escalation in demonstrat­ions against the controvers­ial law.

In many places, people across faiths and communitie­s appeared to join in the protests, which still centered around the Friday prayers, considered by Muslims to be the holiest of the week. This trend was visible from Kashmir

to Telangana, and Gujarat to Kolkata — most of them were peaceful though violence did break out in some places.

In Hyderabad, on Friday morning, protestors blocked the road at the historic Mecca Masjid near Charminar, raising slogans. Several of those who offered prayers at the masjid converged on the roads and demonstrat­ed against the CAA, which eases naturalisa­tion for “persecuted minorities” from three Muslim-majority countries, and the proposed pan-India National Citizen of Register (NRC) that aims to identify illegal aliens.

Deputy Commission­er of Police (South Zone) Avinash Mohanty and other senior police officers were present at the site and oversaw security at Mecca Masjid and Charminar. Fourteen persons were taken into preventive custody from this area, PTI reported.

“We have taken 14 people into preventive custody at the Mecca Masjid. They were let off afterwards,” Assistant

Commission­er of Police (Charminar), B Anjaiah, told PTI.

In Delhi, the epicentre of the afternoon protest was the locality around the Jama Masjid in the Walled City, where large number of people held protests after the Friday prayers.

Reports of violence emerged from Uttar Pradesh, where the police resorted to lobbing teargas shells, and hitting protesters with canes, even as the demonstrat­ors retaliated by pelting stones.

In Gujarat, the mob pelted stones at the police outside a mosque in the communally sensitive Hathikhana area. Several persons objected when the police took videos of the Friday prayers, an official said. Three persons were arrested while a senior official was injured in stone-pelting, the police said. Vadodara police commission­er Anupam Singh Gehlot said some 10 tear gas shells were lobbed to disperse the mob.

Thousands of people gathered outside Hari Masjid in Sewri, Mumbai, to protest against CAA and NRC. People joined the protest after attending the prayers at the mosque.

Maharashtr­a chief minister Uddhav Thackeray had on Thursday spoken to representa­tives of the Muslim community via video conferenci­ng and requested them to maintain law and order during protests against CAA and NRC, news agency ANI reported.

Suresh Mekla, Joint Commission­er of Police, Thane, said, “There is no restrictio­n on arranging these rallies.”

In Dehradun, several offered prayers wearing black ribbons on their arms as a way to express their protest.

Arshi Khan, a professor at AMU’s political science department said, “The whole episode of protests, congregati­on of faiths and the people’s anger shows that India exists as one country with a common thread of political and social togetherne­ss, which existed even during the freedom struggle against the colonial rule. “

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