Anti-CAA protests restart in Assam
Students threaten to intensify stir Opp. parties seek to meet PM
The Asom Jatiyatabadi Yuba Chatra Parishad (AJYCP) on Tuesday staged a massive protest opposing implementation of the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) in Assam.
The problem started after Union home minister Amit Shah earlier this month said the CAA rules would be notified and implemented before the Lok Sabha polls are announced.
Hundreds of AJYCP members and supporters staged a sit-in demonstration at sub-divisional headquarters across the state and shouted slogans and held up placards against the government. The students’ body also threatened to intensify their movement against the CAA if their demands were not addressed by the Centre and the Assam government.
Asserting that the CAA would not be accepted in the state, AJYCP president Palash Changmai said: “Our stand is very clear and we will never allow the CAA in Assam. Instead, we demand that ILP be enforced in Assam without further delay.”
The Opposition parties in Assam have, meanwhile, sought an appointment with Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his visit to the state later this week to apprise him of the “volatile situation likely to arise” if the Citizenship (Amendment) Act is implemented.
A letter seeking an appointment with the Prime Minister was dispatched by state Congress chief Bhupen Borah, who is also the president of the United Opposition Forum of Assam (UOFA), which represents 16 Opposition parties.
“There is a strong perception among the people of Assam irrespective of caste, creed and political affiliation that the Citizenship Amendment Act 2019 will put in danger the culture, history, socioeconomic condition, social fabric and identity of the Assamese people,” said the letter, a copy of which was shared with the media on Tuesday.
“Moreover, the CAA will nullify the historic Assam Accord of 1985, that is regarded as the lifeline of the Assamese people,” it added.
The Opposition parties have sought an appointment with Mr Modi at the earliest, proposing to meet him during his visit to the state on March 8-9.
The letter mentioned the protests against the CAA in 2019-20, before the outbreak of Covid-19 in the state, when five persons were killed and several others injured.
Earlier, the All Assam Students’ Union (AASU) along with 30 ethnic groups and the United Opposition Forum have also announced a series of protest against the
THE PROBLEM started after Union home minister Amit Shah earlier this month said the CAA rules would be notified and implemented before the Lok Sabha elections are announced
Centre’s move to implement the controversial CAA in the state.
AASU president Utpal Sarma termed implementation of the Citizenship Amendment Act as a grave injustice to people, and said that the people of Assam have never accepted the CAA and will oppose any step towards its implementation. “Along with the legal fight, we will continue a democratic and peaceful agitation against the Centre’s decision,” he added.
The United Opposition Forum Assam has also submitted a memorandum to President Droupadi Murmu through state governor Gulab Chand Kataria seeking repeal of the CAA and its non-implementation in Assam. They threatened to hold a democratic mass movement across the state if the CAA is not repealed.
Assam earlier witnessed violent protests in 2019-20 against the controversial legislation that seeks to grant citizenship to religious minorities from Muslim-majority Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanistan who entered India on or before December 31, 2014.
While protests in other parts of India against the CAA were about the exclusion of Muslims from its purview, the United Opposition Forum in Assam is against allowing non-Muslim illegal immigrants to become citizens.
Several groups and indigenous associations feel that if the CAA is implemented, it could lead to an influx of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and threaten the language, culture and landholdings of the local population.