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Regular-article-logo Saturday, 23 November 2024

Black-flag protest in Shillong against citizen bill

Protesters burn effigies of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the NDA government

Our Correspondent Shillong Published 11.01.19, 06:47 PM
A child waves a flag during the protest in Shillong on Friday.

A child waves a flag during the protest in Shillong on Friday. Picture by Andrew W. Lyngdoh

Protests were staged in the Meghalaya capital and Tura on Friday against the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2019.

In Shillong, members of Federation of Khasi, Jaintia and Garo People, Hynñiewtrep National Youth Front, Ri Bhoi Youth Federation and other organisations gathered at Khyndailad to observe a black flag protest.

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An altercation with police ensued as they refused to let the protesters put up black flags on public property but the latter did not relent. The issue was later resolved and the protesters were allowed to put up black flags.

The protesters also shouted slogans and burnt effigies of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the NDA government.

Speakers at the gathering said the bill was a threat to the indigenous peoples of the state and the region, considering the fact that Bangladesh lies in close proximity.

The bill was recently passed by the Lok Sabha but could not be tabled in the Rajya Sabha due to stiff opposition. The bill has set the entire Northeast on a warpath against the Narendra Modi-led government at the Centre as it is feared that it would allow illegal migrants from Bangladesh to swamp the region.

In Tura, the headquarters of West Garo Hills district, about two hundred workers of the Meghalaya Pradesh Youth Congress demonstrated in front of the BJP office and burnt effigies of Modi and BJP national president Amit Shah.

“The citizenship (amendment) bill is communally-motivated humanitarianism. It will give incentive to further immigration, which will lead to the Northeast indigenous communities being reduced to a minority,” Youth Congress president Richard M. Marak said.

He said the bill was nothing but a step towards vote bank politics and urged all BJP members who think about the future of their children to quit the party. “To top it all, we have a chief minister (Conrad K. Sangma) who is voiceless against his political masters. All his press releases about withdrawing from NEDA (North-East Democratic Alliance) and association with the BJP are nothing but empty threats, it is all talk and no action,” Marak said.

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