Citizenship Amendment Act protests
The Citizenship Amendment Act protests, also known as the CAA and NRC protests, the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill protests, or the CAB and NRC protests, are a series of ongoing protests in India against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA), which was enacted into law on 12 December 2019, and against the nationwide National Register of Citizens.[28] The protests began in Assam,[29] Delhi,[30] Meghalaya,[31] Manipur, and Tripura on 4 December 2019.[19] The protests have spread across India, though the protestors are divided about their reasons.[32][3]
Protestors in Assam and other northeastern states fear that granting Indian citizenship to any refugee or immigrant, regardless of their religion, will cause a loss of their "political rights, culture and land rights", violate prior agreements such as the Assam Accord, and motivate further migration from Bangladesh.[33][34][35] In other parts of India, protestors are concerned that the new law discriminates against Muslims, and believe that Indian citizenship should also be granted to Muslim refugees and immigrants.[34][36] Elsewhere, students have protested against the police crackdown in other universities.[3]
The Act only benefits refugees who are Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, Buddhists, Christians and Parsis from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh, but leaves out Muslims and others from these countries who will remain illegal foreigners.[37] Some protestors fear that the Muslim citizens of India will be targeted and marginalized by the new law in combination with the proposed National Register of Citizens, though Prime Minister Narendra Modi has denied any plans for the National Register.[38][39] The Act also is silent about refugees from non-Muslim countries.[40] Among these are Tamil Hindu refugees from Sri Lanka, Rohingya Muslim and Hindu refugees from Myanmar, and Buddhist refugees from Tibet.[41]
The protests started in Assam on 4 December 2019, after the bill was introduced in parliament. Later on, protests erupted in all of Northeast India, and subsequently spread to all major cities of India. On 15 December, police forcibly entered the campus of the Jamia Millia Islamia and Aligarh Muslim University, where major protests were being held. Police used batons and tear gas on the students, and more than 200 students were injured and around 100 were detained overnight in the police station. The unprecedented level of police brutality was widely criticized, and resulted in students intensifying their protests across the country in response to the reprisals.[42]
The protests have resulted in thousands of arrests and 24 deaths.[43][44] Two 17-year old minors were among those reported to have been killed due to police firing live ammunition on protesters in Assam.[25] The Act has been criticized and declared unconstitutional by several constitutional lawyers such as Soli Sorabjee,[45] Markandey Katju,[46] Kapil Sibal, Mahua Moitra, Jairam Ramesh,[47] P Chidambaram,[48] Abhishek M Singhvi,[49] Ashish Goel,[50] and Suhrith Parthasarathy.[51] Several organizations have petitioned the Supreme Court of India to declare the bill as illegal and unconstitutional. On 19 December, the police issued a complete ban on protests in several parts of India. As a result of defying the ban, thousands of protesters were detained. Some of the states have announced that they will not implement the Act. However the Union Home Ministry said that states lack the legal power to stop the implementation of Citizenship Amendment Act.
Background
The Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 (CAA) is an act of the Indian parliament, which amends the Citizenship Act of 1955 to grant a swifter path to Indian citizenship under the assumption of religious persecution to any individual belonging to the specific minorities of Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis and Christians from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan, who entered India on or before 31 December 2014.[52] The Act however, does not mention Muslims and does not offer the same eligibility benefits to Muslim immigrants. The Act also seeks to relax the requirement of residence in India for citizenship by naturalization from 11 years to 5 years for migrants covered under the Act.[53][54][55]
The parliamentary opposition has stated that the Citizenship Amendment Act undermines Muslim identity by declaring India a welcome refuge to all other religious communities except Islam, and that it seeks to legally classify Muslims as second-class citizens by providing preferential treatment to other groups and therefore violates Article 14 of the Indian Constitution, which guarantees the fundamental right of equality under the law to all citizens.[56][57][58][59]
Critics of the Act have stated that due to the National Register of Citizens (NRC), Muslims would be made stateless, while the Citizenship Amendment Act would be able to shield people with Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi or Christian identity as a means of providing them with Indian citizenship if they failed to prove that they were citizens of India under the stringent requirements of the NRC. Some critics allege that it is a deliberate attempt at disenfranchising and segregating Muslims in line with the ethnonationalist Hindutva ideology of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).[60][37][61] The home minister Amit Shah had previously set a deadline for the implementation of a countrywide NRC by stating that the register would be rolled out before the 2024 Lok Sabha elections.[62]
The passage of the Act has sparked massive protests in India.[54] Both Muslim and secular groups have protested, alleging that the Act amounts to state-sponsored religious discrimination. A large number of people in Assam and other north-eastern states have been protesting against the bill over fears that non-Muslim illegal immigrants present in the states would be allowed to stay and that the bill could embolden a rise in further illegal immigration, adversely affecting the culture and society of the region, and potentially escalating sectarian violence and tensions.[63][64] After the act was passed, protests in the region turned violent with over 3000 protesters being been arrested as of 17 December 2019,[27] and some news outlets have described these protests as riots.[65]
The Act directly violates Clause 5 and Clause 6 of the 1985 Assam Accord.[66] The Act was criticized by various NGOs, students bodies and liberal, progressive, and socialist organizations across the country, with the Indian National Congress and other major political parties announcing their staunch opposition. The states of Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, Punjab, Kerala, Rajasthan and union territory of Puducherry have refused to implement it.[67][68] The states of West Bengal and Kerala have also put a hold on all activities relating to the preparation and updation of the National Population Register which is necessary for the Census as well as the implementation of the National Register of Citizens.[69] Although some of the states have opposed the Act, the Union Home Ministry clarified that states lack the legal power to stop the implementation of CAA. The Ministry stated that "The new legislation has been enacted under the Union List of the 7th Schedule of the Constitution. The states have no power to reject it,".[70] The Indian Union Muslim League has also petitioned the Supreme Court of India to strike down the bill as illegal and unconstitutional.[71]
There has also been concerns voiced regarding the exclusion of several non-Muslim countries around India from the Act, such as Sri Lanka, over whom Shiv Sena and several religious figures have quarreled about the citizenship status of Tamil-speaking Hindus who were allowed to legally settle in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu due to previously suffering discrimination in Sri Lanka,[72] Nepal and Bhutan, the latter of which is accused of discriminating against Hindus through a Buddhist-only society.[40] Tibetan refugees from China are also excluded from the bill despite being an persecuted minority and being unable to acquire Indian nationality.[73][74] The Akal Takht, the highest temporal seat among Sikhs has called for the inclusion of Muslim identity in the Act.[75]
Timeline of the Protest
- 4 December
- The Union Cabinet cleared the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2019 for introduction in the parliament.[76]
- After the bill was cleared, violent protests erupted in Assam, especially in Guwahati, and other areas in the state.[77]
- In Dispur, several thousands of protesters broke down police barricades to protest in front of the Assam Legislative Assembly building.[78][79]
- Demonstrations were held in Agartala.[80] Six people have died and fifty people have been injured in the protests against the Act.[81][82]
- 9 December
- The Bill was introduced in 17th Lok Sabha by the Minister of Home Affairs Amit Shah,.[83]
- 10 December
- 11 December
- The bill was subsequently passed by the Rajya Sabha with 125 votes in favour and 105 votes against it. Those voted in favour included BJP allies such as Janata Dal (United), AIADMK as well as the Biju Janata Dal.[86]
- 12 December
- After receiving assent from the President of India, the bill assumed the status of an act.[87] The act will come into force on a date chosen by the Government of India, and will be notified as such.[88]
- Dipanjal Das and Sam Stafford died due to police firing in Guwahati.[89]
- Akhil Gogoi taken in preventive custody.[90]
- 13 December
- 14 December
- Ishwar Nayak died in Assam due to police firing.[93]
- Thousands of protesters packed into Jantar Mantar Road in Delhi.[94][95]
- 15 December
- In Assam, Abdul Alim died due to police firing.[93]
- In Delhi near New Friends Colony, three Delhi Transport Corporation buses were torched.[96]
- Group of Artists in Guwahati stages concert as a protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act 2019.[97]
- Police forcefully entered the campus of Jamia Milia Islamia university, and detained the students. Police used batons and tear gas on the students. More than a hundred students were injured and an equal number were detained. The police action was widely criticized, and resulted in protests across the country.[98]
- Protests held outside the campus of the Aligarh Muslim University. In the evening, police officers forcefully entered the campus and assaulted students. At least 80 students were injured.[99][100]
- In West Bengal, violent protests occurred and five trains were set on fire by the protesters in Lalgola and Krishnapur railway stations in Murshidabad district.[101]
- 16 December
- In Lucknow, police prevents students of Nadwa University to come out of the campus to protest, leading to clashes.[102]
- Priyanka Gandhi led a silent protest at the India Gate along with about three hundred congress workers to show solidarity with the students of Jamia.[20]
- All Assam Students' Union stages Satyagraha across Assam which continues till December 18.[103]
- In West Bengal thousands of people joined a demonstration led by Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee and her ruling Trinamool Congress party.[32]
- Prime Minister Narendra Modi appealed for calm on twitter and clarified that CAA was for the immigrants.[82][104]
- 17 December
- 18 December
- Supreme Court of India hearing 60 petitions challenging the Act, declined to stay implementation of the Citizenship (Amendment) Act and set 22 January 2020 as the next date of hearing on the constitutional validity of the act.[106]
- 19 December
- 3 protesters (2 in Mangalore and one in Lucknow) die in police firings.[107]
- The Administrative authorities imposed ban against public gatherings in BJP ruled states Karnataka, Uttar Pradesh and parts of Delhi.[108][109] Access to internet was restricted in certain places in Delhi and Bangalore.[108]
- Internet was suspended in certain regions of Uttar Pradesh, including the capital city, Lucknow having the data & text services restricted till noon of 21st December 2019. Internet services were also suspended in Sambhal, Aligarh, Mau, Ghaziabad, and Azamgarh districts.[110]
- Protest meetings were held defying the ban in Delhi's Red Fort and Bengaluru.[108] Tens of thousands of people protested in Hyderabad, Patna, Chandigarh, Mumbai and other cities. Calls were made using social medial platforms to ask people to turn up and protest peacefully.[111]
- In Delhi, politicians Yogendra Yadav and Sitaram Yechury along with around 1,200 protesters was detained by the police.[108][112]
- In Delhi, at least 700 flights were delayed and more than 20 cancelled due to traffic jams caused by police closing the roads to stifle protests.[113]
- In Bengaluru, Historian Ramchandra Guha along with several other professors was detained by the police. According to the police around 200 protestors were detained in Bengaluru.[108]
- Curfew imposed in Mangaluru until 20 December, accompanied by violent clashes and death of 2 people due to police firing.[109][44] The police was later witnessed to have forced entry into the hospital where the 2 people were brought.[114][115]
- UNICEF issued a statement asking the government to respect children's right of freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and protest as per the Convention on the Rights of the Child.[109]
- In Ahmedabad, during a violent clash in the Shah-e-Alam's Roza area police used tear gas to counter stone pelting while trying to disperse a crowd of 2000 protesters.[116]
- 90 protestors including 50 students of the Hyderabad university were detained by Hyderabad police.[109]
- A crowd with thousands of protesters gathered at Moulali in central Kolkata to peacefully object CAA and NRC.[109]
- The protests involving 20,000 protesters concluded peacefully at the August Kranti Maidan at Mumbai.[117]
- 20 December
- 21 December
- Chandrashekhar Azad was arrested along with 27 people and three FIRs were registered for the violent incidents on 20 Dec at Delhi Gate and Seemapuri.[120]
- 1100 academics and academia staff from around the world issue a joint statement supporting the Act.[121]
- Peaceful protests occurred in West Bengal, Assam, Meghalaya, Maharashtra and Delhi.[120] An all-woman protest was demonstrated across Assam.[122]
- A spontaneous protest march, approximately 1.5 km long occurred in Kolkata.[123]
- Clashes were reported during the protest near Chennai Central railway station.[120]
- 1 protester died and several injured in clashes at multiple locations in Uttar pradesh. Access to internet continued to be restricted at many places.[120]
- In Patna and other towns of Bihar, supporters of Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) protested at bus and train stations, and blocked roads.[120]
- 22 December
- The Karnataka government announced an ex-gratia of Rs 10 lakh each to the families of the two men killed in violent protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act in Mangaluru on December 19.[124]
- 23 December
- Dibrugarh police arrested 55 persons for involvement in acts of violence in the district during protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019.[125]
- Some unidentified people assaulted three migrant labourers from West Bengal for allegedly taking part in anti-CAA protests.[126]
- An FIR registered against AAP MLA Amanatullah Khan over charges of "sharing an objectionable post" on social media against the Citizenship Amendment.[127]
- 31 arrested for violence during anti-CAA stir in UP's Rampur[128]
Protests
After the bill was approved on 4 December 2019, violent protests erupted in Assam, especially in Guwahati, and other areas in the state.[129] Reactionary protests were held as well in several metropolitan cities across India, including Delhi, Bangalore, Ahmedabad, Hyderabad, Jaipur, Kolkata and Mumbai.[130][131][132][133][134]
As a reaction, protests were also held at universities across the country, including Cotton University,[135] Gauhati University,[136] IIT Bombay,[130] Presidency University,[137] Jamia Millia Islamia,[138][139] Osmania University,[140] University of Hyderabad, University of Delhi,[141] Panjab University[142] and Aligarh Muslim University.[143] By 16 December, the protests had spread across India with demonstrations occurring in at least 17 cities including Chennai, Jaipur, Bhopal, Lucknow and Puducherry.[144][145][146] In Maharashtra the students of Tata Institute of Social Science and the University of Mumbai in Mumbai, Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Marathwada University in Aurangabad and the Savitribai Phule Pune University (SPPU) in Pune staged protests in solidarity with their counterparts at the Jamia Millia Islamia and Aligarh Muslim University. Students from various SPPU-affiliated colleges and members of organisations such as the National Students Union of India, the Students Federation of India and the Yuvak Kranti Dal took part in the protest.[147].
On 19 December, police banned protests in several parts of India with the imposition of section 144 which prohibits the gathering of more than 4 individuals in a public space as being unlawful, namely, parts of the capital Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, and Karnataka, including Bangalore. Police in Chennai denied permission for marches, rallies or any other demonstration.[148][149] Internet services have also been shutdown in several parts of Delhi. As a result of defying the ban, thousands of protesters were detained, primarily in Delhi, including several opposition leaders and activists such as Ramachandra Guha, Sitaram Yechury, Yogendra Yadav, Umar Khalid, Sandeep Dikshit, and D Raja.[150][151][152] Despite of the fear of being detained, tens of thousands of people protested in Hyderabad, Patna, Chandigarh, Mumbai and other cities. Civil society groups, political parties, students, activists and ordinary citizens used social medial platforms to ask people to turn up and protest peacefully.[111] The protests involving 20,000 protesters concluded peacefully at the August Kranti Maidan at Mumbai.[117]
On 21 December 2019, Political party Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD), asked that Muslims should be included in the CAA and the controversy could be ended.[120]
Assam
Earlier protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019 had been started by students of Cotton University few days before the controversial bill was produced on the floors of Lok Sabha. On November 29, the students staged a silent protest outside the university campus.[153][154] After the bill was cleared on 4 December 2019, violent protests erupted in Assam, especially in Guwahati, and other areas in the state.[77] Reuters noted the protests in the state were the most violent in the recent days, and added that at least two people were killed till December 16. Buildings and railway stations were set on fire. Violating the Assam Accord, Citizenship Amendment Act 2019 made 2014 as the cut-off date to determine illegal foreigners but according to people opposing the act, Assam bore the brunt of immigrants from 1951 to 1971, while other states did not as it was 1951 in other parts of the country.[155][156][157]The protesters were angry that the new law would allow thousands of Bengali speaking non-muslim immigrants from Bangladesh, to become legal citizens of India,[98][71] thereby influencing the political and cultural environment of Assam.[158] Thousands of members and workers of All Assam Students Union (AASU) and 30 other indigenous organizations, artists, cultural activists of the state had gathered at Latasil ground in the capital city of Assam to stage Satyagraha against the Act on 16th, 17th and 18th of December.[159][103] Assam police had subsequently detained the general secretary, the adviser to the AASU and over 2,000 protesters in Guwahati while they took out a protest rally on 18 December.[160][161]
On December 12, security personnel, including CRPF jawans wielding batons and shields barged into the office of a private TV channel of Assam, Prag News in Guwahati and beat up its staffers with batons during protests against the amended Citizenship Act.[162] Assamese language newspapers have been extensively covering the ongoing protest against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 across the state. On Friday (December 20), all the newspapers carried reports of violence during the protest from all over the state. Reports of excessive use of force by security forces have also found prominence in all the newspapers besides reports of vandalism in different places.[163]
Peasant leader, Akhil Gogoi, was arrested in Jorhat on Thursday, Decemeber 12 who had been organizing protests as a preventive measure by authorities, A special court of National Investigation Agency (NIA) in Guwahati on Tuesday charged him under sedition for "maoist links" and has sent him to 10-day NIA custody. The Assam human rights Commission has decided to take suo moto cognizance of reports of alleged torture upon Akhil Gogoi.[164][165] According to the Assam government, 190 people have been arrested by the Assam Police for their alleged involvement in the violent incidents during the anti-Citizenship Amendment Act protests across the state, as of 17 December.[90][166]
In Dispur, several thousands of protesters broke down police barricades to protest in front of the Assam Legislative Assembly building.[167][168] Demonstrations were also held in Agartala.[169]
On 15 December 2019, a concert was staged by artistes of Assam as a protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act. The concert was themed as 'No CAA, Concert for peace and harmony'. Along with music, paintings were also demonstrated in the event.[170][171]
In Dibrugarh, the All Assam Student's Union members vandalised the district office of the Asom Gana Parishad which had voted in favor of the act as part of the ruling Coalition.[172] On Thursday, curfew in Dibrugarh was relaxed for 14 hours since 6 am.[173]
Access to the Internet was restricted in Assam by the administrative authorities.[43] A curfew was also declared in Assam and Tripura due to the protests,[71] leading the army to be deployed as protesters defied those curfews. Railway services were suspended and some airlines started to waive rescheduling or cancellation fees in those areas.[174] Officials reported that at least four people died after clashes with police in Guwahati, Assam.[175][174] Dipanjal Das and Sam Stafford died due to police firing on 12 December.[176][177]. On 15 December, Gauhati Medical College and Hospital official stated that Ishwar Nayak died on the night of 14 December and Abdul Alim died on 15 December morning. Both of them had been admitted to the hospital after suffering gunshot wounds.[93] As of 15 December, it was reported that at least 6 people had died due to police firing during the protests.[178] After ten days of restriction, mobile internet services in the state was restored from December 20 although the Gauhati High Court had ordered the government of Assam to restore the service by 5 pm on 19 December.[179]
On December 21, an all-woman protest was demonstrated across Assam.[122]
Tripura
Tripura also saw protests against CAA. Along with Assam, the internet was also shut down in Tripura.[180][181]
According to police about 1,800 people had been arrested in Tripura till December 12.[182]
Other North-Eastern states
Manipur and Arunachal Pradesh saw protests with their respective student organisations calling strikes and shutdowns.[181]
Delhi
On Saturday, 14 December 2019, thousands of agitators packed into Jantar Mantar Road, filling up a space estimated to be half the size of a football ground, as multiple demonstrations occurred against the CAA in Delhi.[94][95]
On 15 December 2019, in Delhi near New Friends Colony, three Delhi Transport Corporation buses were torched.[96][93]
On 16 December 2019, Priyanka Gandhi led a silent protest at the India Gate along with about three hundred congress workers to show solidarity with the students of Jamia Millia Islamia.[20]
On 17 December 2019, Delhi's Seelampur area had stone-throwing crowds face off against police officers. Police retaliated with tear gas and batons, in which, according to local reports, several protesters and officers were injured. There were also reports of a police station being set on fire. According to police, buses were vandalized in the area.[105]
On 19 December 2019, the administrative authorities imposed ban against public gatherings in parts of Delhi.[108] 20 metro stations were closed to prevent the movement for protests.[107] At least 700 flights were delayed and more than 20 cancelled due to traffic jams caused by police closing the roads to stifle protests.[113] Protest meetings were held defying the ban in Delhi's Red Fort and Mandi House.[108] Access to mobile internet was restricted in certain places for the first time in Delhi.[108] In Delhi, politicians Yogendra Yadav, Sitaram Yechury, Nilotpal Basu, Brinda Karat, Ajay Maken, Brinda Karat, Prakash Karat, Sandeep Dikshit, Umar Khalid and D. Raja along with around 1,200 protesters were detained by the police from Red Fort and Mandi House areas.[108][107][183]
Digital rights activists, who accessed and studied the order suspending internet in several areas in Delhi on 19 December, stated that it was not issued from the "right channels" and, therefore, was "illegal".[184]
On 20 December 2019, 2 Delhi Metro stations- Jamia Millia Islamia and Jasola Vihar Shaheen Bagh were closed. Amid nationwide crackdown because of CAA, Bhim Army Chief Chandrashekhar Azad's permission for the march from Jama Masjid to Jantar Mantar had been denied by Delhi Police. In spite of the denial of permission and the imposition of Section 144, a protest march was held where Azad was able to escape after being detained by the police.[119][185] The protests were peaceful throughout the day, but in the evening a car was torched in Daryaganj after which the police attacked the protesters with water cannons and lathi charge.[186] On 21 December, Chandrashekhar Azad was arrested along with 27 people and three FIRs were registered for the violent incidents on 20 Dec at Delhi Gate and Seemapuri.[120]
On 21 December 2019, Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed a rally in Ramlila ground for the upcoming 2020 Delhi Legislative Assembly election, although the Delh Police made elaborate arrangements to ensure that there was no protest around the Ramila Ground, areas like Jantar Mantar, Jamia Millia, Nizammudin, and Connaught Place witnessed multiple peaceful demonstrations. A "solidarity march" was also conducted in South Delhi in support of Jamia Millia Islamia students and those facing police action during protests against the contentious law.[187] Journalists conducted a protest against police brutality on reporters and journalists covering the Anti-CAA protests particularly in the states of Delhi, Uttar Pradesh and Karnataka. Sitaram Yechury who attended the protest stated that only Bharatiya Janata Party ruled states are experiencing violence, while other states were peaceful such that it was clear who are encouraging violence.[188]
Jamia Millia Islamia
On 13 December 2019, the students of Jamia Millia Islamia University undertook a march to the Parliament, protesting against the CAA. They were prevented from going ahead by the police who used batons and tear gas to disperse the protesters leading to clashes with them. Fifty students were detained by the police after the clash. According to the students, police attacked the peaceful protestors with stones and sticks, in which several students were injured. The students then retaliated with the stones and clash ensued. Police denied the allegations claiming that after the protestors were prevented from taking their march onwards they attacked the policemen with stones first. Police then used tear gas to disperse them.[189]
On the morning of 15 December 2019, more than two thousand students of Jamia joined the protests against CAA in Delhi.[190] Jamia Milia Student Body and Jamia Millia Islamia Teacher’s Association (JTA) condemned the violence that happened on the same day in Delhi and stated that no student or teacher was involved in the violence.[93]
At 6:46 pm on 15 December 2019, hundreds of police officers forcefully entered the campus of Jamia, without the permission of college authority.[93] The police used batons and tear gas on the protesting students.[146] Nearly a hundred students were detained by the Delhi police and released at 3:30 am next morning.[191] The visuals of students being dragged and assaulted by the police was telecasted in the news. Students from all across Delhi joined the agitation.[192] About two hundred people were injured[146] and were admitted to AIIMS and the Holy Family Hospital.[193]
On 16 December 2019, two students of Jamia were admitted to the Safdarjung Hospital with bullet injuries received during the protests on 15 December.[146] One of the victims, M. Tamin stated that he was not participating in the protest and was passing through the area on a motorcycle, when police suddenly started caning the protesters and he was shot in the leg by Police, from a point blank range.[194] The doctors treating him stated that the wounds were gunshot wounds.[195][196] The police stated that they were investigating the allegations of gunshot.[193]
The university has been shut until 5 January and the residents were asked to leave the campus.[197] The vice chancellor of the university stated that they will file a court case against the police, demanding an investigation on how police was entered the university premises and assaulted the students.[32][98]
- Response
The police violence was heavily criticized by filmmaker Anurag Kashyap, actor John Cusack and Rajkummar Rao condemned the police violence, with Cusack referring it to fascism and Kashyap calling the government to be "clearly fascist".[198][199] Actor Swara Bhaskar, praised the students protests for raising their voice against communalism and called the police action as dictatorial, brutal, shocking and shameful. She also questioned if it was the police and not the protesters who vandalized the property in Delhi and Aligarh.[200]
Amnesty International India criticized the police for the violence against the students of Jamia and Aligarh University and stated that the allegations of police brutality and sexual harassment against the students should be investigated and culprits be punished. Defending the right of the students to protest, its director stated that the arrest of protesters violate India's obligations under the Article 19 and Article 21 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to respect and protect the right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly.[197]
In response to the police crackdown in Jamia Millia Islamia University and Aligarh Muslim University, protests were also joined by the students of the educational institutions of IIT Kanpur, IIT Madras, Jadavpur University, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, IISc, Pondicherry University, IIM Ahmedabad[201], as well as organisations such as Pinjra Tod and the Students' Federation of India.[202] The students of Jadavpur University, West Bengal, called a protest gathering on 16th December, to "condemn the brutal state terror on the students of Jamia Millia Islamia University".[203] At the event of IIT Kanpur, communal slogans were also raised by the protesters.[204]
On 17 December, Police arrested ten people (some of them having criminal history) in the case of the violent clashes in Jamia. None of the arrested were students of Jamia.[205]
Sikkim
Youths and students from Sikkim University joined in the protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act, expressing condemnation for the deaths of protesters in Assam and harsh treatment against students protesting against the Act on Saturday, 14 December. There were also concerns regarding the scrapping of Article 371(F) of the Indian Constitution which safeguards the rights of the local people of Sikkim and demands for introduction of Inner Line Permit in Sikkim.[206]
West Bengal
On Saturday, 14 December 2019, violent protests occurred in West Bengal as the protesters attacked railway stations and public buses. Five trains were set on fire by the protesters in Lalgola and Krishnapur railway stations in Murshidabad district; railway tracks were also damaged in Suti.[101]
On Monday, 16 December 2019, tens of thousands of people joined a demonstration led by Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee and her ruling Trinamool Congress party.[32] Mamata Banerjee stated that the NRC and CAA would be implemented in the state "over her dead body", she further appealed people to maintain peace and tranquility while accusing "outside forces" and "stooges of the BJP" of engaging in violence.[207][208]
On Tuesday, 17 December 2019, road and rail blockades continued in parts of West Bengal though no major incidents of violence were reported while protests continued in the districts of South 24 Parganas, North 24 Parganas and Nadia.[209]
On 19 December 2019, a crowd with thousands of protesters gathered at Moulali in central Kolkata to peacefully object CAA and NRC.[109] Mamata Banerjee held a second rally in Kolkata and stated that the Central Government was trying to project the CAA Protests as though it was a Hindu vs Muslim fight.[107] She also stated that "BJP is buying skull caps for its cadres who are wearing them while vandalising properties to malign a particular community,".[210] Earlier, on 18 December, a youth known locally as a BJP worker named Abhishek Sarkar and five associates, each of them in lungi and skullcap, were detained by Murshidabad police on Wednesday after local people allegedly caught them throwing stones at a train engine.[211][212][213]
On 21 December 2019, a spontaneous protest march, approximately 1.5 km long occurred in Kolkata from Shahid Minar till Mahajati Sadan, singing and shouting slogans.[123]
Between 13 and 17 December 2019, multiple incidents of violence were reported during the protests. According to the police, as of 21 December, more than 600 people had been arrested for allegedly being involved in the violence.[120]
Uttar Pradesh
Protests were held in Aligarh, Kanpur, Bareilly, Varanasi and Lucknow.[214] Banaras Hindu University students also protested in support of AMU and Jamia students.[147] On 19 December, the administration banned the public assembly all over the state to prevent further protests in the state. Access to the internet was restricted in Azamgarh district for 2 days, after protest continued for 2 days in the area.[109] In Lucknow several buses, cars, media vans and motorbikes were torched. A protester named Mohammad Vakil died due to gunshot injuries in the stomach.[107] Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister, Yogi Adityanath has stated that the authorities would seize the properties of those who indulge in violence in the state.[215]
On 20 December 6 protesters are killed in police firing in UP.[118] Arif (25), Zaheer (40), and Moshin (25) from Meerut, while Anas (22) and Sulaiman (26) from Nehtaur area, Bijnor, Uttar Pradesh.[186] Rights activists in Uttar Pradesh, said local policemen were conducting raids on their houses and offices to prevent them from planning fresh demonstrations. According to the Press Trust of India (PTI), the death toll from Friday's protests in Uttar Pradesh's 13 districts has risen to 11.[216]
On 21 December, violent protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 and police crackdown had erupted across the state in several districts including Rampur and Aligarh as the death toll rose to 16. In Rampur, a general strike (bandh) was called by protesters even as section 144 was in force in the region and internet remains suspended, subsequently clashes had broken out between protesters and the police, resulting in injuries to several people. In Kanpur, a police post was burned to the ground amid violent clashes between the protesters and the police. Around 705 people were arrested across the state, of which 102 people had been for making objectionable remarks and posting objectionable content on various social media platforms. Internet services were also suspended across major cities in Uttar Pradesh, following state government orders.[217][218] According to the UP Police, as of 21 December a total of 218 people have been arrested in the city of Lucknow.[120]
Aligarh Muslim University
On 15 December, protests against CAA were held outside the campus of the Aligarh Muslim University. On the evening of 15 December, police officers forcefully entered the campus of the University and assaulted the students. At least 60 students were injured including the president of the students Union. The access to the internet was restricted in the area by the district administration. The university was closed from 15 December till 5 January 2020.[99] A report by three activist-lawyers alleged that the police had resorted to “deceptive shelling”, firing explosives camouflaged as tear gas shells during the crackdown.[219] On the evening of 17 December, police released 26 people (including 8 students) on personal bonds. They had been arrested on charges of violence.[220]
After a lull of four days, on 20 December, AMU campus again witnessed protests on Saturday with hundreds of AMU non-teaching staff joining hands with AMU teachers' association, protesting against the CAA and "police atrocities" against the agitators in various parts of the state.[218]
Mau
On 16 December, in response to the police crackdown at Jamia Millia University in Delhi and Aligarh Muslim University over the Citizenship Amendment Act, clashes between the police and protesters occurred in Dakshintola area of Mau, Uttar Pradesh where at least fifteen vehicles (including police vehicles) were torched and pelted with stones. Police resorted to firing in the air and using tear gas to disperse the protesters.[221] A portion of the police station at Mirza Hadipura area of Mau district was set on fire. According to the District magistrate, the protesters were upset with the police action in Jamia University.[191]
Nadwa University, Lucknow
On 16 December, the students of Nadwa University, in Lucknow while protesting inside the campus planned a protest march, but the police locked the gates of the campus from outside to prevent the planned march.[102] A clash between the police and the students locked inside the campus ensued and involved stone pelting from both sides. The police officers were hitting the students with sticks as seen in the television footage.[32][222]
Punjab
On 16 December, students led protests against the CAA staging demonstration in Punjabi University in Patiala, in Punjab University in Chandigarh and regional centre of PU in Machhiwara, Ludhiana. Protests were also held in various other parts of the state in Amritsar, Malerkotta and Bathinda.[223]
On 17 December, amid ongoing protests nationwide, a statement from the Akal Takht, the highest temporal seat among Sikhs favored the inclusion of Muslim community in the Citizenship Amendment Act.[75]
On 19 December, a protest march was held which started at Punjab University campus, in sector 14 and concluded at sector 17. The call for the protest march was given by an amalgam of student organisations of Panjab University, including Students For Society and Ambedkar Students Association, among others. Students and citizens from all over Chandigarh, participated in the city’s first major protest march against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 on Thursday.[224]
Chief minister Capt. Amarinder Singh who was already opposing the CAA, like other Congress chief ministers, committed to not implementing the exercise of formulating a National Register of Citizens (NRC). The Shiromani Akali Dal, which had earlier supported the Bill in parliament as part of the alliance with the Bharatiya Janata Party has revised it's stance with regards to the CAA, with its president stating that "there are Muslims who are living in India for more than three decades, it could be a futile exercise to disenfranchise them."[225]
Kerala
On 16 December, the ruling Left Democratic Front (LDF) coalition and the rival parliamentary opposition coalition of United Democratric Front (UDF) organized a joint hunger strike in the Thiruvananthapuram Martyr's Square. Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said that Kerala will "stand together to fight against the evil designs of the Modi government undermining the secular credentials of India, terming the Citizens Amendment Act as "anti-constitutional and anti-people". Leader of the Opposition Ramesh Chennithala observed that another struggle for Independence is required to save the constitution from 'fascist forces'.[226]
Kozhikode city on Monday witnessed a number of protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act with people from various walks of life hitting the street to oppose what they called a discriminatory legislation. There were also protests against previous night’s police action on the Jamia Millia campus in the national capital too.Hundreds of students participated in a ‘Long March’ organised by the Kozhikode district committee of the Students' Federation of India, from Kerala Government Polytechnic College to Mananchira, in the afternoon.[227]
On 17 December, Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI) and allied organisations called up harthal against CAA. Buses of Kerala State Road Transport Corporation (KSRTC) were vandalised during the protest.[228] Kerala police has detained nearly 233 people in connection with the hartal.[229]
Hundreds of students from 40 colleges and universities all over Kerala conducted a long march and sit down protest on December 18 from 2.30 pm to 5 pm. They also expressed solidarity to the students of Jawaharlal Nehru University, Aligarh Muslim University and Jamia Millia Islamia. Representatives from Pondicherry University and Delhi University were present in the march, which was conducted by a collective called Students' Unity of Ernakulam.[230]
On 19 December, expressing solidarity with those agitating against the CAA and voicing concern over the controversial Act, several organisations including student outfits continued their protest in various parts of Kerala. Hundreds of activists of Democratic Youth Federation of India conducted a protest march to Raj Bhavan in Kerala, the official residence of the Governor, after senior Left Democratic Front were detained during an anti-Citizenship Act protest in Delhi.[231]
Karnataka
Protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) broke out in various parts of Karnataka on Monday, 16 December. In Mysore, hundreds of people came out on the street, raising slogans demanding the abolition of the CAA and took out a bike rally against the Act was taken out. Following the agitation, the police imposed prohibitory orders under Section 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC) terming any congregation in the city of Mysore to be illegal. In Bangalore, the IISc students organised a day-long silent protest in front of the statue of Jamsetji Tata in solidarity with the students of Jamia Millia Islamia University in New Delhi and other parts of India. The protesters staged sit-in demonstrations, took out rallies and raised slogans against the BJP government at the Centre.[147]
In Shimoga, former MLA K B Prasanna Kumar who led the protests near Gandhi Park in the city was detained by the police under the premise of the protests potentially turning violent. Rallies and protests were also carried out opposing the CAA in Bellary, Bidar, Gulbarga, Kodagu and Udupi.[147][232] Protests were held in Raichur after it became apparent that approximately 5,000 of the 20,000 Bangladeshi immigrants residing at a camp in Sindhanur would obtain citizenship.[232][233]
The police arrested 38 protesters from Campus Front of India in Mangalore who were marching towards the Deputy Commissioner residence on grounds of blocking traffic on Balmatta Road.[234] On 19 December, a curfew was imposed in Mangalore until 20 December, while protesters hit the streets, defying prohibitory orders resulting in the death of two people after police firing into a crowd.[109][44] The police later barged into Highland Hospital with riot gear where the two people where brought, while also allegedly beating up patients and their relatives. The incident was caught on CCTV cameras, which recorded them as banging on ICU doors within the hospital.[115][114] Home Minister of Karnataka Basavaraj Bommai claimed that people from Kerala started the violence in Mangalore and that they tried to set a police station on fire.[235] Karnataka Police restricted the entry of people from the state of Kerala to Mangalore by verifying their identities at the Thalappady border; more than 50 people who were trying to enter the city without identity cards were detained.[236] On 20 December, the police arrested and confiscated the mobile phones of several journalists in Mangalore, including many from Kerala.[237][238][239] The journalists were later released on the intervention of the Chief Minister of Kerala, Pinarayi Vijayan who condemned the action as an attack on media freedom.[240]
Bangalore Police detained hundreds of people including historian Ramachandra Guha who had gathered outside Town Hall in the city to protest against the CAA and the proposed NRC, in the morning.[241] Bangalore Police said that the imposed Section 144 will be until midnight on December 21.[242] On 20 December, Karnataka High Court has asked the AG to file a reply on hearing plea against Section 144 in Bangalore.[243]
Tamil Nadu
On 16 December, protest against CAA was organised by the Muslim organisations and political parties, in Tirupathur district of Tamil Nadu. Effigies of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Home Minister Amit Shah were burnt, after which more than a hundred people were detained by the police.[244] Demonstrations protesting against the CAA and the attack on students in Delhi were also held by the students of Government Law College at Katpadi and Government Arts College in Tiruvannamalai.[244]
A protest is organized to be held at Valluvar Kottam in Chennai at 3 pm on Dec 19. On Dec 18, police permission for this protest was revoked.
On 20 December, Kollywood actors Siddharth, Singer TM Krishna and other 600 detained for anti-CAA protests in Valluvar Kottam In Chennai.[245]
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam along with allied parties has announced that it will hold a "mega rally" as an anti-CAA protest on December 23.[246]
Gujarat
On 16 December, Gujarat Police detained around 50 activists, academicians, and students who had gathering outside the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad and CEPT University for a protest over the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA).[247][248]
On 17 December, five students were arrested by Gujarat police for allegedly creating a graffiti against Citizenship Act. According to the police, the students (all in their early twenties) of the Maharaja Sayajirao University's Fine Arts department had made a graffiti that said "no CAB Modi", but instead of the letter 'o' in the phrase the students made a 'swastika' sign. The graffiti was made at locations that included police headquarters, Kala Ghoda Circle, the Fatehgunj pavilion wall and the wall of a hostel near Rosary School. A police complaint was registered on 16 December for "using provocative and humiliating words to hurt sentiments of the people from one community and cause violence, and also damaging public property". The Police in a stated that "They used slogans with certain symbols in their graffiti to intentionally hurt religious sentiments of a particular community and affect public peace and cause riots against members of a community. They also damaged public property." The police has already arrested five and two students who were absconding were being searched.[220]
On 19 December 2019, peaceful protest march was carried out in several parts of Ahmedabad such as Lal Darwaja, Jamalpur, Juhapura, Mirzapur, Shah E Alam, Nehrunagar. The peaceful protest march in Shah-e-Alam's Roza area turned violent after police intervened to disperse the crowd. Police used tear gas to counter stone pelting while trying to disperse a crowd of 2000 protesters.[116] Protest rallies and strikes were also organised in several cities of Gujarat including Vadodara, Palanpur, Chhapi, Shahera, Godhra, Borsad, Wankaner, Morbi and Modasa. Section 144 was imposed in Gir Somnath district.[249]
Telangana
On 16 December, protests consists of thousands of students from major institutes such as University of Hyderabad, Osmania University and MANU University demanding a rollback of the Citizenship Amendment Act, occurred in Hyderabad.[250]
On 21 December, numerous protests occurred across the Hyderabad organised by students, NGOs and various political parties. Shops and business establishments as a form of silent protests. The Hyderabad Police stated that the protests remained peaceful. Demands calling for the end of the silence of the Chief Minister, K. Chandrashekar Rao were also raised, whose party, Telangana Rashtra Samithi had voted against the bill in parliament.[251]
Odisha
Members of the Muslim community from different parts of state, farmer leaders, student activists and Dalit leaders, hit the road in Odisha with a peaceful protest demanding that the amended Citizenship Act and the National Register of Citizens not be implemented in the State. They marched from Satyanagar Masjid towards the residence of Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik. They submitted a memorandum to Chief Minister and Governor Ganeshi Lal.[252][253]
Bihar
On Wednesday, 17 December, posters describing Bihar Chief Minister, Nitish Kumar as "missing" were erected as a form of protest in Patna. Nitish Kumar has been criticised for his silence over the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019. while his party, Janata Dal (United), had supported the bill in both the Houses of Parliament as part of the alliance with the Bharatiya Janata Party. The JD(U) party strategist Prashant Kishor, party spokesperson Pavan Verma and MLC Gulam Rasool Balyawi have also voiced dissatisfaction over the party's stance on CAA.[254][255] On, Friday, 19 December, Nitish Kumar declared that the National Register of Citizens, will not be implemented in the state, becoming the first major Bharatiya Janata Party ally to reject the controversial measure.[256]
On Thursday, a bandh was called by communist parties in Bihar, supported by a number of small parties, where protesters blocked rail and road traffic in protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019 and the proposed countrywide implementation of National Register of Citizens. In Patna, the state capital, activists belonging to the All India Students Federation and All India Students Association barged into Rajendra Nagar Terminus and squatted on the tracks disrupting movement of trains for about half an hour early in the morning. Traffic was restored after the protesters were chased away by CRPF personnel. Fresh disturbance was witnessed at the station at around 10 am when hundreds of activists of Jan Adhikar Party Loktantrik burnt tyres on the road adjacent to the Rajendra Nagar Terminus while some of them squatted on the tracks.[257][173]
On Saturday, a "Bihar bandh" was called by the Rashtriya Janata Dal, where bandh supporters reportedly squatting on railway tracks in Araria and East Champaran districts.In Nawada, bandh supporters demonstrated on National Highway 31 where wheels were burned on the road to disrupting the movement of vehicles, while in Vaishali, the highway was blocked with the help of buffaloes. In the capital Patna, hundreds of party supporters entered lathis and railway stations and bus stations with party flags, but were repulsed by policemen. At Darbhanga, RJD workers and supporters protested bare chest, sloganeering against Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar and central government.[258][259]
Maharashtra
Different NGOs and college students, backed by Congress, Nationalist Congress Party and Left Democratic Front parties jointly formed a front with the name "Hum Bharat Ke Log" held the protest on 19 December, at the August Kranti Maidan.[260][109] In Mumbai, several actors including Farhan Akhtar, Swara Bhaskar, Huma Qureshi, Raj Babbar, Sushant Singh, Javed Jaffrey, Aditi Rao Hydari, Parvathy Thiruvothu, Konkona Sen Sharma, Nandita Das, Arjun Mathur and filmmakers Anurag Kashyap, Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra, and Saeed Mirza joined in the protest venue.[107][261][262] Mumbai police had deployed more than 2,500 policemen to monitor and control around 20,000 protesters.[117] The peaceful protest concluded without any violent incidents. Mumbai police was applauded by prominent artists including Farhan Akhtar, Swara Bhaskar, Kunal Kamra, politician Milind Deora and citizens for its professional conduct in maintaining law and order.[263] Similar protests were also held in other cities such as Pune and Nagpur.[264]
Jharkhand
Protest marches were held in Ranchi and Jamshedpur, with participation of various tribal people's rights organisations which additionally raised concerns that Adivasis enjoyed land rights by tradition and most of their land is vested with village heads hence it will be difficult for them to show individual ownership of land for the National Register of Citizens.[265]
Madhya Pradesh
Ban on public assembly (Section 144) was announced in 44 districts of Madhya Pradesh on 19 December.[266] Congress leader Arif Masood led a silent procession with hundreds of protesters in Panna. On 19 December, in Khandwa, the police refused the protesters to take a march, after which stone pelting was reported. Police used violent crowd control measures.[70] Protests reportedly turned violent in Jabalpur, leading to a curfew being imposed in four police station limits.[267] In Bhopal, hundreds of people gathered at the Iqbal Maidan where they carried out a silent protest by sitting in groups of four in order to abide by the Section 144.[268] Bharatiya Janata Party members enacted a gherao at the collectorate office in Satna due to the refusal of the state to implement the CAA in the state.[269]
Haryana
On 19 December, a protest march under the designation of "Communal Harmony Manch" was conducted in Kurukshetra.[270]
Rajasthan
On 22 December, Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot on Sunday led a protest march called the 'Samvidhan Bacho rally' against the amended citizenship law and demanded the repeal of the act, stating it was against the constitution and is an attempt to divide people in the name of religion. The march was attended by nearly 300,000 people and supported by various other parties including Aam Aadmi Party, Rashtriya Lok Dal and Janata Dal (Secular).[271][272]
Overseas
The Assamese community in London staged a protest outside the High Commission of India.[273] Protests were also held at Harvard University[274]and Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the United States of America, where the students held demonstrations against the violent police crackdown in Jamia Milia Islamia.[93] Protests are also planned in Berlin and Zurich.[275]
Participants
The CAA, even at its proposal stage, had been contentious and had faced severe protests from civil society, intelligentsia, local political outfits and students. Initial resistance was offered by the All Assam Students' Union (AASU), a students’ organisation, best known for the Assam Movement agitation against illegal Bangladeshi immigrants in the 1970s and 1980s. The organisation has been actively protesting against the CAA, since 4 December, when it was still a draft legislation. On 12 December, students in at least 50 colleges and universities nationwide had taken to the streets to protest as the legislation was passed. However, the wave of student protests snowballed into a pan-India movement late on December 15 following what transpired at a demonstration held by students of New Delhi’s Jamia Millia Islamia (JMI) University.[276][277]
Student organizations
Protesting
Assam
- All Assam Students’ Union
- Asom Jatiyatabadi Yuba Chatra Parishad
National
- All India Students Federation[278][279]
- Chhatra Bharati[280]
- Pinjra Tod[202]
- Students For Society[224]
- Ambedkar Students' Association[224]
- Students Federation of India (affiliated to the Communist Party of India (Marxist))[281]
- Democratic Youth Federation of India (youth wing of the Communist Party of India (Marxist))[282]
- National Students' Union of India (youth wing of the Indian National Congress)[283]
- All India Students Association (student wing of the Communist Party of India (Marxist–Leninist) Liberation)[284]
- All India Democratic Students Organisation (affiliated to the Socialist Unity Centre of India (Communist))[285]
Pro-government
- Akhil Bhartiya Vidyarthi Parishad (student wing of the Bharatiya Janata Party)[283]
Casualties
As of 21 December 2019, 16 people were killed in the CAA protests in Uttar Pradesh,[120] 3 killed in Karnataka[120] and 5 in Assam. All the three states were ruled by BJP. Overall 25 people were killed in whole of India.
- Dipanjal Das, 23, Assam [286]
- Sam Stafford, 17, Assam[286]
- Abdul Alim , 23, Assam[286]
- Ishwar Nayak, 25, Assam[286]
- Azizul Haque, 45, Assam[286]
19 December
- Mohammad Wakeel, 25, Uttar Pradesh[287]
- Nausheen, 23, Mangalore, Karnataka[288]
- Jaleel Kudroli, 49, Mangalore, Karnataka[288]
20 December
- Arif (25), Zaheer (40), and Moshin (25) from Meerut, Uttar Pradesh[186]
- Anas (22) and Sulaiman (26) from Nehtaur area, Bijnor, Uttar Pradesh[186]
- Noor-e-Alam in Muzaffarnagar, Uttar Pradesh[186]
21 December
- Mohammad Bilal, 27, and Shehroz, 22, Sambhal, Uttar Pradesh.[289]
Impact
As the ongoing protest against the Citizenship Act turned violent, authorities of Gauhati University, Dibrugarh University and Cotton University postponed all semester exams scheduled up-to December 16, 2019.[290] No play was possible on the fourth day of the cricket match between Assam and Services in the 2019–20 Ranji Trophy because of the protests.[291] BCCI shifted two fixtures featuring three northeastern teams to other venues[292]. The protests also affected the football matches of NorthEast United, with their fixture against Chennaiyin getting postponed.[293] The India-Japan summit in Guwahati, which was supposed to be attended by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was also cancelled.[294][295] France, Israel, the U.S. and the U.K. have issued travel advisories for nationals travelling to northeast India.[296][297]
Transport
Several trains and at least 700 flights were delayed and more than 20 cancelled as a result of the protest.[298][113] It was reported that the Indian Railways suffered losses worth ₹ 85 crore in property damage due to the protests.[299] On 20 December, the Kerala State Road Transport Corporation suspended all bus services to Mangalore, while many Karnataka State Road Transport Corporation buses were blocked in Kerala.[300]
On 19 and 20 December, several stations of the Delhi Metro were closed as a precautionary measure.[301][302]
Communication
The government imposed internet shutdowns in the states of Assam and Tripura, five districts in West Bengal, Bhopal, Dakshina Kannada and parts of Delhi.[303][7][304][184] Mobile internet and SMS services were suspended in several places in Uttar Pradesh such as Lucknow, Ghaziabad, Bareilly, Meerut and Prayagraj.[305][306]
Reactions
Return of Awards and Honours
- Mujtaba Hussain decided to return his Padma Shri and claimed Indian democracy has reduced to "a joke".[307][308]
- Malayalam film titled Sudani from Nigeria crews decided to boycott national awards function over NRC, CAA protest which won national award for the Best Malayalam film in 66th National Film Awards.[309][310]
- Shirin Dalvi decided to return Maharashtra Rajya Sahitya Akademi Award.[311][312]
- Jahnu Barua withdrew his film Bhoga Khirikee from the Assam State Film Awards.[313][314]
International
United Nations
UN Human Rights chief, Michele Bachelet said, “We are concerned that India’s new Citizenship (Amendment) Act 2019 is fundamentally discriminatory in nature”. The Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019, is “fundamentally discriminatory”, and undermines India’s commitment to international law and the Indian constitution.[315]
United States
U.S. International Commission on Religious Freedom (USCIRF) has expressed concern over the Act and considered recommending sanctions against Home Minister Amit Shah and other top leaders.[316]
China
People's Daily, an official newspaper of Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, justified internet restrictions citing India's internet shutdowns. The newspaper said that India did not hesitate to shut down the internet in its two states when there was a significant threat to its national security; according to an article in The Times of India, activists described the justification as setting a dangerous precedent for internet freedom.[317][318]
Pakistan
Prime minister of Pakistan Imran Khan said "Modi government's policies can cause a big refugee crisis".[319]
Malaysia
Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said "Already people are dying because of this law, so why is there a necessity to do this thing?".[320]
Bangladesh
11 Dec 2019
Bangladesh's Foreign Minister A K Abdul Momen said the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill could weaken India's historic character as a secular nation and rejected the allegations that the minorities are facing religious persecution in his country.[321]
Pro-CAA protests
Rallies and demonstrations in support of Citizenship Amendment Bill were held in Mumbai, Nagpur, Bangalore, Dehradun etc.[322][323][324][325] A rally in Kolkata was headed by Jagat Prakash Nadda, working national president of BJP.[326] Protests against CAA were condemned in these rallies and hailed Narendra Modi for taking a decision on CAA.[327][328] Over 1,000 academicians released statements in support of CAA.[329] On 23rd December 2019, doctors in the Kolkata carried out a rally in support of CAA.[330]
A human chain to support CAA was formed in Pune.[331] Students from Fergusson College, Savitribai Phule Pune University and other institutes took part in the protests.[332] In Gujarat, students of Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda and Veer Narmad South Gujarat University carried out a rally to support the Act.[333][334] Delhi University Students' Union also supported the CAA which was condemned by other student unions.[335]
Gallery
-
Anti-CAA protestors stopping traffic in New Delhi
-
Locals in New Delhi protest against CAA and NRC
See also
References
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