CAB — Splitting India
India is under the grip of violent protest demonstrations over the controversial citizenship bill. Now the protests against a divisive new citizenship law raged as Washington and London issued travel warnings for northeast India following days of violent clashes that have killed two people.
Many in the far-flung, resource-rich northeast fear the new legislation will grant citizenship to large numbers of immigrants from neighboring Bangladesh, whom they accuse of stealing jobs and diluting the region’s cultural identity. Several thousand protesters rallied in New Delhi late Saturday to urge Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to revoke the law, some holding signs reading: Stop Dividing India.
People are not gathered here as Hindus or Muslims; people are gathered here as citizens of India. We reject this bill that has been brought by the Modi government and we want that equal treatment as is enshrined in our constitution. Protests turned violent in West Bengal state, a hotbed of political unrest, with at least 20 buses and parts of two railway stations set on fire as demonstrators blocked roads and set fire to tires. No injuries were reported.
Tensions also simmered in Guwahati in Assam state, the epicenter of the unrest, where medical staff said two people were shot dead and 26 hospitalized late Thursday after security forces fired live rounds. 85 people had been arrested in connection with the protests and those officials were working to identify violent demonstrators caught on video.
Friday’s funeral procession for Sam Stafford, 18, who was killed in the demonstration, was attended by hundreds of angry and distraught mourners who shouted, Long live Assam. We were watching news all day on TV about the protests when my nephew left home in the evening. We asked him not to go but he went with his friends. Anticipating further unrest, authorities extended an internet ban across Assam until Monday. Most shops were shut and anxious residents stocked up on supplies Saturday when the curfew was relaxed during the day.
The Citizenship Amendment Act allows for the fast-tracking of applications from religious minorities, including Hindus and Sikhs from Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh, but not Muslims. Samujjal Bhattacharya from the All Assam Students Union, which has been at the forefront of the protests, the group would continue its fight against the new law in the streets and in the court.
Modi and Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe postponed a summit that was reportedly due to be held in Guwahati beginning Sunday, and the United States and Britain warned their nationals to exercise caution if traveling to the wider northeast region. Islamic groups, the opposition and rights organizations say the law is a part of Modi’s Hindu nationalist agenda to marginalize India’s 200 million Muslims. He denies this and says that Muslims from the three countries are not covered by the legislation because they have no need of India’s protection.
Assam has long been a hotbed of ethnic tensions. In 1983, 2,000 people, mainly Bengali Muslims, were butchered in what became known as the Nellie massacre. This year a citizenship registry left off 1.9 million people many of them Muslims unable to prove that they or their forebears were in Assam before 1971, leaving them to face possible statelessness. There has been this agitation [against] illegal migration from Bangladesh over many years. They feel that their rights to land, to jobs, and the entire social fabric, education, existing social services and so on will be impacted by this.
US professor, Gregory Stanton, President of the organisation Genocide Watch, warns that Muslims in Kashmir and Assam are just one step away from extermination. Stanton made the statement at a briefing to the US Congress on Kashmir and the NRC, organised by the Indian American Muslim Council, Emgage Action and Hindus for Human Rights.
Stanton said preparation for genocide is definitely under way in India, The persecution of Muslims in Assam and Kashmir is the stage just before genocide. The next stage is extermination that’s what we call genocide. Stanton alleged Assam was seeing the “construction of a pretext for expulsion of Muslims.
Author is the President, Center of Pakistan and International Relations (COPAIR) and Editor-in-Chief of ‘Mélange int’l Magazine’ and ‘ The Asian Telegraph’
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