San Francisco Chronicle

Clampdown on protesters and internet

-

NEW DELHI — A group of protesters in New Delhi was beaten and shoved into buses by police on Friday after attempts to demonstrat­e against a new citizenshi­p law that has triggered nationwide protests in recent weeks.

About two dozen people gathered near an Uttar Pradesh state government building in the capital to protest deaths and allegation­s of police brutality during protests in the north Indian state.

Paramilita­ry and police forces were deployed and the internet was shut down in Muslimmajo­rity districts in Uttar Pradesh, where more than a dozen people have been killed and more than 1,000 people arrested in the protests since the law was passed by Parliament earlier this month.

The Citizenshi­p Amendment Act provides an expedited path to citizenshi­p for Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs, Christians, Jains and Parsees from Muslimmajo­rity Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanista­n, but not Muslims.

Critics say it violates India’s secular constituti­on, and have filed challenges with the Supreme Court. Tens of thousands of protesters have taken to India’s streets to call for its revocation.

Twentythre­e people have been killed nationwide in the protests, the first major roadblock for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t agenda since his party’s landslide reelection earlier this year.

Modi has defended the citizenshi­p law and accused the opposition of pushing the country into a “fear psychosis.”

Sixteen of the deaths occurred in Uttar Pradesh, according to state government spokesman Awanish Awasthi. Muslims account for 20% of the state’s 200 million people. The state government is controlled by Modi’s governing party. Government officials have repeatedly said security forces haven’t killed anyone.

Security drones buzzed over western Uttar Pradesh as authoritie­s sought to head off protests, which turned violent after last week’s Friday prayers. Mobile internet was blocked in about a third of the state, including in parts of the capital, Lucknow, where one person was killed in a protest a week ago.

Elsewhere in New Delhi, security forces surrounded a rally at one of India’s largest mosques, where a protest march last Friday ended in violence after a car was set on fire in front of a police station.

In Mumbai, India’s financial capital, authoritie­s denied protesters permission to conduct a 3.7mile march.

 ?? Manish Swarup / Associated Press ?? Policemen detain a protesting student, who is holding a book on the Indian constituti­on, in New Delhi.
Manish Swarup / Associated Press Policemen detain a protesting student, who is holding a book on the Indian constituti­on, in New Delhi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States