۱۰ فروردین ۱۴۰۳ |۱۹ رمضان ۱۴۴۵ | Mar 29, 2024
Students join rally against new citizenship law on campuses across India

Anger has been growing in India over the Citizenship Amendment Bill (CAB), which gives refugees of all of South Asia’s major religions, including Buddhists and Hindus — except Muslims — from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh a clear path to Indian citizenship.

Hawzah News Agency - (New Delhi - India) - Protests in India against a controversial citizenship bill have spread to universities across the country, with police storming student campuses and firing tear gas at protesters.

Anger has been growing in India over the Citizenship Amendment Bill (CAB), which gives refugees of all of South Asia’s major religions, including Buddhists and Hindus — except Muslims — from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh a clear path to Indian citizenship

Human rights activists say the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi designed the discriminatory law explicitly to exclude Muslims from the possibility of acquiring refugee status in India and, eventually, citizenship.

India’s 200 million Muslims view the measure as the government’s first step toward making them second class citizens of the country.

On Monday, students joined the protests at universities across the country, including in Hyderabad, Varanasi, and the capital New Delhi, according to local media.

Video captured by students show baton-wielding police storming the campuses while firing tear gas at students.

Police officers were also seen beating up students inside campus areas like bathrooms and the library.

On one occasion, police locked up the gates of a college in the northern city of Lucknow to prevent students from taking to the streets.

About two dozen students at another college in the city sneaked out to protest.

Students in New Delhi’s Jamia Millia Islamia (JMI) and Uttar Pradesh state’s Aligarh Muslim University (AMU) had been holding protests since the new law was passed last week.

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