Muscat Daily

Indian police battles anti-Modi protesters over disputed law

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Indian police baton-charged protesters on Sunday to stop them reaching Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s car as nationwide protests against a bitterly disputed citizenshi­p law entered a second month.

Tens of thousands staged protests through the night in the eastern city of Kolkata to denounce Modi’s weekend visit to the capital of West Bengal state, whose local rulers have strongly opposed the legislatio­n.

Policemen said they were forced to act after protesters tried

“The government can’t suppress our voice. We are not afraid. We are determined to fight for our rights,” Samit Nandi, one of the protesters, told AFP. “We will continue our protests until Modi leaves our city.”

West Bengal has become a political battlefiel­d between Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and regional powerhouse Mamata Banerjee, whose Trinamool Congress party leads the state.

Banerjee is among state leaders nationwide who have said they will not implement the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act, which excludes Muslims from a list of ethnic minorities from Pakistan, Afghanista­n and Bangladesh who are allowed to seek Indian nationalit­y.

Opponents say the government has created a religious test for citizenshi­p in the secular country.

Many among India’s 200mn Muslims fear the law is a precursor to a national register of citizens that could leave them stateless in the country of 1.3bn.

“CAA is not about taking away citizenshi­p, it is about giving citizenshi­p,” Modi told supporters. He has accused political opponents of ‘misleading’ and ‘inciting’ people against his government.

Widespread demonstrat­ions have rocked the Hindu-majority nation since the law was approved by parliament last month.

At least 27 people have been killed with police accused of using disproport­ionate force in several states.

Home Minister Amit Shah, the government number two, also held a rally in Jabalpur on Sunday to build support for the law and several hundred supporters of the measure marched in New Delhi.

But in a new sign of internatio­nal unease over the law, a third Bangladesh minister cancelled a visit to Delhi in apparent protest.

Deputy foreign minister Shahriar Alam was to have attended a diplomatic symposium in the Indian capital this week.

Foreign Minister A K Abdul Momen and Home Minister Asaduzzama­n Khan called off separate visits in December.

The government has denied any link to the new law, however.

 ?? (AFP) ?? Demonstrat­ors hold black balloons and flags to protest against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, during a demonstrat­ion in Kolkata on Sunday
(AFP) Demonstrat­ors hold black balloons and flags to protest against Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, during a demonstrat­ion in Kolkata on Sunday

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