Twitter
Advertisement

Muslim organisations hold massive protests in Chennai, other Tamil Nadu cities over CAA-NPR-NRC

Muslim organisations of Tamil Nadu had called for a protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), the planned National Population Register (NPR) and the proposed National Register of Citizens (NRC).

Latest News
article-main
Demonstrators hold placards as they wave Indian national flags during a protest organised by various Muslim organisations
FacebookTwitterWhatsappLinkedin

Despite repeated assurances by Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Edappadi K Palaniswami that the CAA would not harm Indian citizens, minorities in the state took out massive rallies in Chennai, Madurai and Tirunelveli among other cities to express their opposition to the CAA-NRC-NPR. 

Muslim organisations of Tamil Nadu had called for a protest against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), the planned National Population Register (NPR) and the proposed National Register of Citizens (NRC). 

It was on Tuesday that Chief Minister Edappadi Palaniswami had challenged the opposition in the state assembly to specify if any member of the minority community who was born and lived in Tamil Nadu had been affected by the new citizenship law. He had also accused the opposition of misleading the people over CAA, disrupting a peaceful state and causing Law and Order problems.

On Tuesday, justices M Sathyanaraya and R Hemalatha granted an interim injunction till March 11, restraining the Federation of Tamil Nadu Islamic and Political Organisations and its allied bodies from going ahead with the agitation, proposed for Wednesday.

The court however made it clear that it was not expressing any opinion on the CAA-NRC-NPR. 

Members of various Muslim outfits had gathered in protest along the Walajah road in the heart of Chennai city after the Madras High Court did not permit them to lay siege to the state sssembly in Fort St. George. Carrying the Indian flag, posters demanding the scrapping of CAA, NRC and NPR over 15,000 protestors raised slogans urging the legislators to pass a House resolution against the CAA, as was done in various non-BJP ruled states.

The anti-CAA march in Chennai was carried out under tight police cover and even drones watching from above as Walajah road connects two major arterial city roads. The protesters had put up a makeshift stage in Chepauk, opposite the famed MA Chidambaram cricket stadium. Given the concerns that the situation could spiral out of control, the Police had barricaded the stretch in order to restrict the protestors from marching towards the Secretariat, which is barely four kilometres away. 

Chennai has been witnessing agitations by various outfits against the CAA for over a month. The protest at Old Washermanpet in north Chennai from February 14 has been modelled after Delhi’s Shaheen Bagh and is being referred to as "Chennai's Shaheen Bagh” on social media.

Protests by religious outfits have intensified after Chief Minister Edappadi K Palaniswami defended the police action against the anti-CAA protestors who were gathered at the Washermanpet locality. He said that some miscreants had instigated the untoward incidents. 

Palaniswami, whose AIADMK is an ally of the BJP stated, “Protestors did not have the required permission. When they were asked to get arrested, some people started pelting stones, slippers and bottles and that is when the police had to resort to use of force. This is an instigated protest.”

Find your daily dose of news & explainers in your WhatsApp. Stay updated, Stay informed-  Follow DNA on WhatsApp.
Advertisement

Live tv

Advertisement
Advertisement