Defiant Indians protest against citizenship law
NEW DELHI: Indians defied bans on assembly yesterday in cities nationwide as anger swells against a citizenship law seen as discriminatory against Muslims, following days of protests, clashes and riots that have left six dead.
Two major Indian telecom firms also said yesterday that they have cut mobile services in parts of New Delhi on government orders.
The new law eases citizenship rules for people fleeing persecution from three neighbouring countries, but excludes Muslims, stoking accusations that Prime Minister Narendra Modi wants to reshape India as a Hindu nation and creating unease abroad.
Following days of protests that have seen four people shot dead, dozens injured, hundreds arrested and vehicles torched, authorities have banned gatherings in areas that together are home to hundreds of millions of people.
They included Uttar Pradesh state, areas of the northeast and parts of Bihar, New Delhi, Hyderabad, Bangalore and Chennai, all of which have seen protests in recent days, and in the case of the capital violence.
“People should seek permission to assemble at places where Section 144 is not imposed. No one will be allowed to gather elsewhere,” Delhi police spokesman M S Randhawa told AFP.
Fourteen Delhi metro stations were shut including one near police headquarters, besieged by protestors earlier this week, as some roads into the megacity were blocked, causing immense traffic jams.
Demonstrators on Thursday ignored the bans on assembly including in Delhi and Hyderabad where television pictures showed police dragging and carrying demonstrators away as they brandished placards and chanted slogans.
One protestor, Kawalpreet Kaur, who according to her Twitter profile is the Delhi President of All India Student’s Association, posted that police had filled 14 buses with detainees at the Red Fort landmark.
“But more and more people are pouring in, too many to be detained,” she added.
In Bangalore those detained included internationally renowned historian Ramachandra Guha while in the northern state of Bihar protestors blocked several railway stations and national highways.
In the financial and entertainment capital Mumbai, Bollywood stars were expected to join a protest largely organised by students and young professionals on Thursday afternoon. — AFP
People should seek permission to assemble at places where Section 144 is not imposed. No one will be allowed to gather elsewhere.
M S Randhawa