NEW DELHI: Two people were killed in Mangaluru in Karnataka during clashes between the police and protestors. One person also reportedly died of firearm wounds at a hospital in Lucknow.
Two persons were seriously injured during the protest opposing the Citizenship Amendment
Act and undergoing treatment in the intensive care unit of an hospital here, police said on Thursday.
Mangaluru city police Commissioner P S Harsha said as there was an attack on the police, they had to use force.
In Lucknow, a man died of a firearm injury which he suffered while passing by a violent protest against the amended citizenship law in Lucknow, according to his family.
Uttar Pradesh Police chief O P Singh, however, said the death was not linked to the agitation or any police action.
“Mohammad Wakeel (25) died of firearm injury here,” King George’s Medical University (KGMU) Trauma Centre in-charge Sandeep Tiwari told PTI.
“Two other patients are undergoing treatment in the trauma centre and one of them has firearm injury,” he said.
It was not immediately clear from where the firing took place.
The victim’s brother, Taufiq, told reporters that “his brother was going home in Hussainabad as there was trouble and he was shot by a ‘daroga’ (police officer) from a police outpost.”
“Initially it was said he had pellet injuries. He was not involved in any agitation. We both are auto-rickshaw drivers and never indulged in any such act (agitation),” Taufiq added.
Simultaneous protests raged in several states on Thursday with thousands-strong crowds of students, activists and others defying prohibitory orders to voice their dissent against the newly amended citizenship law, resulting in violence in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar and detention of hundreds across the country.
Authorities resorted to barricading and clampdown on mobile services, including an unprecedented one in the national capital, while protesters also faced tear gas shelling and police batons at some places including in Uttar Pradesh where incidents of arson and stone pelting gave the protests a violent colour.
Senior opposition leaders, a large number of students and activists were detained on Thursday by police on their way to two mega demonstrations against the new citizenship law as prohibitory orders and restrictions on internet and mobile phone services in parts of Delhi-NCR region inconvenienced thousands of people.
Opposition leaders including D Raja, Sitaram Yechury, Nilotpal Basu, Brinda Karat, Ajay Maken Sandeep Dikshit and activists Yogendra Yadav, Umar Khalid, were among those detained near the Red Fort and Mandi House — the sites of the two demonstrations.
Opposition parties also joined forces to attack the Modi government on the new law which they said goes against the “idea of India”, even as the ruling BJP asserted there would be no rethink on implementation of the Citizenship (Amendment) Act and that the National Register of Citizens (NRC) would also be brought in.
Protests remained largely peaceful at most places with the agitators depending on slogans and placards to express their opposition to the new law and what they called ‘barbaric police action’ against students of Jamia Millia Islamia and Aligarh Muslim University. Some groups of protesters in Delhi also offered roses to policemen, saying love is their only answer even for tear gas shells and batons.
In the neighbouring Uttar Pradesh, where violent clashes saw at least a dozen vehicles including bikes, being set afire, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath said those who damaged public property would have to pay for it and the culprits have been identified through video and CCTV footage.
“We will take revenge from them,” he said.
There were incidents of stone pelting and arson in Bihar as well, while rail and road traffic was hit in several states.
Barricades by police in and around the national capital, closing of Delhi Metro gates at several stations and an unprecedented suspension of mobile voice, messaging and internet services in parts of Delhi added to woes of the public.
Left leaders Sitaram Yechury, D Raja, Nilotpal Basu and Brinda Karat, activist Yogendra Yadav and historian Ramchandra Guha were among those who were detained in various parts of the country for taking part in the anti-citizenship law stir for defying prohibitory orders.
The law has been amended to enable grant of speedier citizenship to non-Muslim refugees from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan if they had to leave their respective countries due to religious persecution.
“India today has the ignominy of being the largest internet shutdown in the world. It is unacceptable. Metro stations were closed. This is worse than what we saw during the Emergency. The manner in which they are dealing with democratic protests is unacceptable,” Yechuri said.
CrPC section 144 was imposed by Delhi Police in Red Fort area, but that did not deter scores of students and activists from converging there to raise their voice against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act and the police crackdown in JMI and AMU.
They were put into buses in a bid to clear the Red Fort area. Holding placards and shouting slogans, the protesters allowed themselves to be escorted to the buses.
“We are requesting the protestors to please apply for the designated place for the protest. In the non-designated places, public face problems and many emergency services get affected,” Deputy Commissioner of Police (Central) Mandeep Singh Randhawa said, while urging people to cooperate.
A large number of protesters converged near Sunehri Masjid in Old Delhi, after being pushed back by police from the historic Red Fort. They were heard raising slogans of ‘Hum Honge Kamyaab’, ‘Inquilab Zindabad’ filled the air.
Slogans of ‘CAA Se Azaadi and NRC Se Azaadi’ were also raised by the crowd, which included locals from Old Delhi and East Delhi and a large number of students.
A large number of protestors gathered at the Jantar Mantar as well.
Several companies in the NCR region also asked their employees to work from home and cautioned them against joining demonstrations.
Guha, who was detained in Bengaluru for defying prohibitory orders, said it was “absolutely undemocratic” that police were not allowing even a peaceful protest, which is the democratic right of citizens.
The Communist Party of India too staged demonstrations in Bengaluru against the citizenship law and the proposed nation-wide NRC.
Protests were also held at several other places in the state, including in Hubballi, Kalaburagi, Hassan, Mysuru and Ballary where police detained demonstrators who violated prohibitory orders.
In UP, while a state transport bus was set on fire in Sambhal area of the state, while violent protests broke out in capital Lucknow too when a mob pelted stones and torched vehicles parked outside a police post.
DGP O P Singh said police had to fire tear-gas shells to control the situation in Madeyganj area, while nearly 20 people have been taken into custody.
The opposition Samajwadi Party and Congress legislators held their protest at the legislative assembly complex in Lucknow.
AMU teachers held a silent march opposing the new law in Aligarh.
“We feel that we are fighting for the idea of India as envisaged by the founding fathers of the nation. This is not a struggle for the rights of any particular community,” AMU Teachers Association secretary, Professor Najmul Islam told PTI.
Hundreds of AMU students protesting against the amended Citizenship Act clashed with police on Sunday at a campus gate, leaving 60 injured. After the protest, the administration had announced closure of the university till January 5.
In Bihar, members of Left-wing student organisations squatted on railway tracks at Rajendra Nagar Terminus early in the morning, while hundreds of activists of Jan Adhikar Party (JAP), floated by controversial ex-MP Pappu Yadav, burnt tyres on an adjacent road.
They also vandalized an ambulance which tried to make its way through the road and head towards a residential locality nearby.
In Jehanabad, which had been a stronghold of the ultra-Left movement in Bihar, CPI(ML) activists disrupted traffic on national highways.
In Maharashtra, the Congress, NCP and various other parties came together under a front called ‘Hum Bharat Ke Log’ for a protest rally at Mumbai’s August Kranti Maidan, the place where in 1942 Mahatma Gandhi told the then British rulers to quit India.
Noted freedom fighter G G Parikh, 94, who participated in the Quit India movement in 1942, was present at the Maidan.
“The Constitution, drafted by Dr B R Ambedkar, is being violated and is under attack. This is the reason that the entire country has chosen this day to condemn the unconstitutional and divisive laws of the BJP government,” the front said.
The rally saw thousands of people, including workers of political parties, students, professionals and also a smattering of Bollywood personalities, who made a strong case against the Act and the NRC. However, Maharashtra’s ruling alliance partner Shiv Sena kept itself out of the rally.
Protests in West Bengal, Assam and Meghalaya, which were at the centre of the stir initially, were largely peaceful. Protests were also held in Telangana, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Chandigarh, Jammu, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh, among other states.
At a rally in Kolkata, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee dared the Modi government to go for a UN-monitored referendum over the amended law and the proposed nationwide NRC and said the BJP will have to quit if it fails such a “mass vote”.
Two persons were arrested for hurling crude bombs on a group of anti-CAA protesters in West Bengal’s North Dinajpur district, police said.
At some places, including in the national capital and Mumbai, pro-CAA demonstrations were also held by some groups of people.
Mumbai
Thousands of protesters took to the streets of the financial capital against the Citizenship Act converging at the August Kranti Maidan, where Mahatma Gandhi in 1942 told the British to quit India.
The gathering included workers of political parties, students and a smattering of Bollywood personalities, who made out a strong case against the Act and the National Register of Citizens (NRC).
Despite it being a work day, the protestors began trickling in from all the corners this afternoon to the ground in south Mumbai, from where the Mahatma had given the clarion call of Quit India against the colonial British rule.
Telangana
Scores of protesters, including those of Left parties and students of University of Hyderabad, were taken into preventive custody here on Thursday when they tried to hold protest rallies against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA).
Police said there was no permission for any rally in support or against the CAA in Hyderabad though Left parties and various people’s organisations held demonstrations in the state.\
CPI national secretary K Narayana, party’s Telangana state secretary Chada Venkat Reddy, Telangana Jana Samiti (TJS) chief M Kodandaram were among 350 people taken into preventive custody.
“Despite rejection of their (CPI) application for holding the protest rally, they insisted on taking it out, saying they had already given a call in this regard following which police foiled their attempts to hold any rally,” Deputy Commissioner of Police (Central Zone) P Viswa Prasad told PTI.
Alleging that the CAA was against the spirit of Constitution, Narayana claimed that the CAB was passed in parliament on the back of BJP’s numerical strength.
“Ours is a secular state. We are opposing this because it is against the spirit of Constitution and principles of secularism,” he said.
The Left parties, Muslim and other people’s organisations took out rallies at different places across Telangana.
A large number of police personnel were deployed near the historic Charminar here to prevent any untoward incidents even as over 50 people, including around 20 women, were taken into preventive custody, police said.
Around 100 students of University of Hyderabad, who planned to take part in a protest rally, were also taken into preventive custody outside the varsity’s campus and taken near a police station where they read preamble of the Constitution of India.
They raised slogans like “Samvidhan par hamla nahi chalega” (Attack on Constitution will not be allowed).
Ahmedabad
A protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act and the National Register of Citizens in the Muslim-dominated Shah-E-Alam area here turned violent , with at least five policemen getting injured in stone-pelting.
The police lobbed teargas shells to disperse people.
Protesters shouted slogans and held placards saying “No CAB No NRC”. When the police tried to disperse them, the protesters started throwing stones and brick pieces.
—PTI