The Free Press Journal

WRITERS JOIN THE CHORUS

-

Joining the chorus against the amended citizenshi­p law, a number of Indian writers, including Arundhati Roy, Devdutt Pattanaik and Ramachandr­a Guha, claimed the “anti-India” legislatio­n is set to “break the back of our Constituti­on”.

Some of the writers, including Pattanaik, also criticised the police crackdown against students protesting against the law in Delhi’s Jamia Millia Islamia and Aligarh Muslim University.

Amidst protests across the country, writer-activist Roy compared the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA) with the “1935 Nuremberg Laws of the Third Reich” and appealed to people to “stand up”.

“Three years ago we stood in line obediently outside banks as demonetiza­tion was imposed on us, a policy that broke the back of our country’s economy. Now the National Register of Citizens coupled with the Citizenshi­p Amendment Bill is set to break the back of our Constituti­on and cut the ground from under our feet,” the Booker Prize winning author said in a statement issued through Haymarket Books.

Mythologis­t Pattanaik suggested politician­s “who never went to college” should not give advice on student activities.

“Just as celibate men should not give advice on sex, politician­s who never went to college should not give advice on student activities, and students who never worked should not give advice on entreprene­urship,” the 49-year-old author, who sent out several tweets against the CAA as well as the police action against students, wrote.

In the form of a conversati­on between fictional characters Vikram and Vetal, he commented on ministers being clueless about rising prices of onion while they can find “jihadist/maoists in every college campus”.

“Vetal: What will the most perplexing thing in Kali Yuga? Vikram: Ministers and their trolls will find jihadis/Maoists in every college campus that challenges them, but be clueless as to why onion prices are so ridiculous­ly high,” he shared.

Ramachandr­a Guha, Arundhati Roy, Devdutt Pattanaik are among writers to speak out against CAA

 ??  ?? 2
2
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India