Lok Sabha passes Citizenship Bill amidst Opposition outcry

no major protests took place on triple talak or even RJB. It was only when an explicitly discriminatory law was passed that they protested. It is a fact.

So, what you are suggesting that muslims who are prosecuting non-muslims in these three countries should also be allowed to take refuge in India so they can continue with their predatory pursuits in India too? And you are supporting these Jamia and AMUs, et al. This simply reflects that such people have no sense of balance and judgement for humanity and for India. They are fanatics who thrive on hatred and violence. India has tolerated enough of these idiotic people led by Jaichands.
 
Modi has gone as per the law of the land. when you create special laws for muslims and other minorities of India, article 14, 15 and 21 is not violated but the moment you apply it to Hindus and other religions specifically without excluding muslims, hell breaks lose. Please tell me how is the bill discriminatory? Give me one reason.

Actually Modi has created special laws for Hindus and other minorities residing outside India. So, it is just as fine as the special laws for minorities of India.
no, he did no such thing. He just decided to do what he always does when he fails. Created another controversy. He is one of the biggest failurees India has had as a PM. Kiss all the superpower dreams goodbye man. Those days are over.

forget about Modi, Congress lootera gang has failed India since 1947.
 
Modi never had a reason to create a discriminatory law. He could have passed a non discriminatory law and then made sure that only Hindus got acceptance.....but that would not have let him achieve the division he was planning and protests that would take attention away from his enormous failure as a PM. If India was growing at 12% a year you think he would have done this? He would have tomtommed that no end. Now because he is a failure he needs to rile up on all these issues.

It's not a discriminatory law. It only identifies minorities, not majorities. And all minorities are covered.
 
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Guys.. please read this article: Scroll Investigation: Amit Shah’s all-India NRC has already begun – with the NPR

Looks like pan India NRC might not be on the lines of Assam NRC.. The NRIC will be prepared from the NPR, after filtering out the doubtful citizens who would be asked to prove their citizenship.. But, no confirmation from GOI.. If this is the case, then, poor, illiterate Hindus at least can breathe easy..
 
Guys.. please read this article: Scroll Investigation: Amit Shah’s all-India NRC has already begun – with the NPR

Looks like pan India NRC might not be on the lines of Assam NRC.. The NRIC will be prepared from the NPR, after filtering out the doubtful citizens who would be asked to prove their citizenship.. But, no confirmation from GOI.. If this is the case, then, poor, illiterate Hindus at least can breathe easy..
Pan India NRC is NPR and there has been no update in NRC since 70 years
 
@S. A. T. A time for southern states to erect barricades on borders?There is precedent for this. In the 1960s when anti-civil rights movements took place in the south supported by the Ku Klux Klan and the lot, the northern states erected barricades to prevent them from entering their territory. We should start doing that.

If borders would have worked as flawlessly as you assume, there wouldn't be any backlash on CAA/NRC.

Watch this video. It's pretty much same thing in Britain.


It's not a discriminatory law. It only identifies minorities, not majorities. And all minorities are covered.

There's somewhat truth in citizenship laws being discriminatory, not just for India but in whole world. Amit shah explained it. In strict human rights essence, some citizenship laws are anti-poor and some are anti-illiterate. Some are lottery systems.
 
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Musashi Nair (@Musashi_Nair) Tweeted:
Many seem surprised by the extent of indoctrination and love for Yakub Memon among these students from Kerala. Let me give you an example of how an indoctrination system has become institutionalised that stretches from Kerala to Jamia. FYI @BDUTT Akhilesh Mishra on Twitter ( )

Very interesting thread. Do read it.
 
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They will cry a river if you ask these morons increase the number of visa given to legal Indian IT professionals but will preach us about how to deal with illegal immigrants in our country . f@cking hypocrites
Was it not BD in which, the tangos killed only Hindus in a restuarant in Dhaka about 2-3 years back?
 
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The world's largest democracy, shuts down the internet far more than any other country. This week, 60 million people - roughly the size of France - have no service

Jeffrey Gettleman, Vindu Goel, Maria Abi-Habib,
Dec 19 2019


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As the government of India pushes increasingly provocative policies, it is using a tactic to stifle dissent that is more commonly associated

with authoritarian regimes, not democracies: It is shutting down the internet. India tops the world — by far — in the number of internet

shutdowns imposed by local, state and national governments. Last year, internet service was cut in India 134 times, and so far this year, 93

shutdowns have occurred, according to SFLC.in, which relies on reports from journalists, advocacy groups and citizens. The country’s closest competitor is Pakistan, which had 12 shutdowns last year. Syria and Turkey — countries not especially known for their democratic spirit — each shut down the internet just once in 2018. “Any time there is a sign of disturbance, that is the first tool in the toolbox,” said Mishi Choudhary, founder of SFLC.in, a legal advocacy group in New Delhi that has tracked India’s internet shutdowns since 2012. “When maintenance of law and order is your priority, you are not thinking about free speech.”

Last week, citing a threat of violence and false rumors, authorities in the states of Assam, Meghalaya and Tripura in northeast India severed

connectivity in response to protests against a new citizenship law that critics say would marginalize India’s 200 million Muslims. Much of West

Bengal and parts of Uttar Pradesh, two of India’s most populous states, were also put under digital lockdown. With the Kashmir region still

languishing offline since August, at least 60 million people have been cut off — roughly the population of France. These moves come as Prime Minister Narendra Modi tightens his grip on India. His administration and its allies have jailed hundreds of Kashmiris without charges, intimidated journalists, arrested intellectuals and suppressed gloomy economic reports. His critics say he is undermining India’s deeply rooted traditions of democracy and secularism, and steadily stamping out dissent. With half a billion Indians online, authorities say they are simply trying to stop the spread of hateful and dangerous misinformation, which can move faster on Facebook, WhatsApp and other services than their ability to control it.

“A lot of hate and provocative stuff starts appearing on messaging services, particularly WhatsApp,” said Harmeet Singh, a senior police

official in Assam, which borders Bangladesh and has been one of the hot spots of protests against the citizenship law. But as the internet becomes more integral to all aspects of life, the shutdowns affect far more than protesters or those involved in politics.

The shutdowns can be devastating to people just trying to make a living. In Kashmir, internet service was stopped on Aug. 5, when Modi’s

government suddenly revoked the area’s autonomy, sent in thousands of troops and disabled all communication, stifling public dissent. The

internet has now been off 135 days. Some people even take a short flight to the next state just to check their email. “There is no work,” said Sheikh Ashiq Ahmad, president of the Kashmir Chamber of Commerce. He said thousands of entrepreneurs, especially those who make silk scarves and handicrafts, relied on social media to sell their products online.

“The dignity of these people has been taken away,” he said. While many of India’s shutdowns have been intended to prevent the loss of life,

some occurred for more mundane reasons, like to make it harder for students to cheat on exams. The legality of India’s internet shutdowns has not been tested in court. All shutdowns are supposed to be authorized by top state or national officials. In practice, most are ordered by local authorities, sometimes with just a few phone calls to local service providers. The effectiveness of these shutdowns isn’t clear. Research by Jan Rydzak, a scholar at Stanford University, suggests that the information vacuum caused by an internet shutdown can actually encourage violent responses.

On Tuesday, fresh protests broke out across the country once again over the citizenship law. In Kolkata, protesters blocked highways, and in New Delhi, police officers clashed with demonstrators, firing tear gas and tugging away participants by the collar of their jackets. In Tamil Nadu and Kerala, opposition politicians led rowdy rallies against the new citizenship law, Citizenship Amendment Act, which favors non-Muslim immigrants seeking citizenship in India.

Many people are also upset about the National Register of Citizens, a citizenship review process that has already left nearly 2 million people
in Assam potentially stateless. Amit Shah, India’s home minister and Modi’s right-hand man, has vowed to take the citizenship reviews nationwide.

Many Indians, especially members of the Muslim minority, believe that with the new measures, the Modi government is plotting to strip away
rights from Muslims. They fear that the government could force citizenship reviews on all Indians and that Hindus without proper papers would be allowed to stay in India while Muslims without proper papers would be asked to leave.

Modi and his allies deny this, saying they are simply trying to address illegal migration and help persecuted minorities at the same time. Modi
and his Bharatiya Janata Party have roots deep in a Hindu-centric worldview that believes India, which is 80% Hindu, should be a Hindu
homeland. Some of their biggest moves, including the crackdown on Kashmir, which was India’s only Muslim-majority state, have been widely
seen as intentionally anti-Muslim. In West Bengal, which is about 27% Muslim, violent protests around these policies erupted on Friday. Protesters ransacked more than a dozen train stations. By Sunday, authorities shut down the internet for more than one-fourth of the state’s 90 million people.

Sujauddin Shekh, a college teacher in Murshidabad, said the shutdowns have left many people unable to know what’s going on. “People in this region are largely dependent on Facebook and WhatsApp for the news,” he said. There is no doubt that a lot of potentially dangerous information flows freely through India’s cyberspace, especially during crises. Take the example of the five women filmed rescuing a friend from being beaten up by police during a protest. Overnight, they became heroes — and targets. On Sunday, videos went viral showing the five young women, students at a predominantly Muslim university in New Delhi, forming a protective circle around a young man as police officers beat him with wooden poles.

Several officials in Modi’s party tried to sully their reputations; one wrote a tweet calling them “rabidly indoctrinated Islamists.” There is no evidence of that and in fact, one of the women, 20-year-old Chanda Yadav, is a Hindu. Yadav said the campaign to discredit her has been almost too much to bear. Still, she wants to speak out. “This fight is about India as a secular nation, an India where we all belong,” she said. But in places where the internet has been cut off, it’s harder to freely debate these questions.


On Dec. 11, authorities in Assam shut down everything but a government-run landline internet service, which was necessary to keep banks, universities and other institutions online. On Tuesday, they restored most landline internet service, but mobile internet, which is how most Indians stay connected, remained off.

“Peace is more important than a little inconvenience to you and me,” said Singh, the Assam police official.

International New York Times
 
Citizenship Act: China pats gag, India ‘Red’-faced


India’s move to shut down Internet to contain protests against its new citizenship law has won endorsement from China Beijing, which often draws flak for flouting human rights to crush dissent, sought to make common cause with New Delhi, endorsing the recent shutdown of the Internet for containing protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act of India — particularly in the northeastern region and some districts of West Bengal.

An article published in China’s state-run People’s Daily newspaper endorsed the shutdown of Internet to control protests against the new law in India — calling it a “standard practice for sovereign countries” to deal with “a state of emergency”. It recalled that similar actions by the Chinese government to deal with a “similar national security threat” in Xinjiang region of China a few years ago had drawn “sharp criticism from mainstream media in Europe and United States”.

China has been drawing flak from the US and Europe for violating human rights in its Xinjiang Autonomous Region, where it has imprisoned over one million Uyghur Muslims in so-called “re-education camps” in the name of preventing radicalisation.

Columnist Qing Qiu noted that even India, which the US projected as an example of democracy in Asia, had not hesitated to shut down the Internet in its Assam and Meghalaya states, when it felt that it was necessary to do so to deal with “a significant threat to national security”.

“Since the 1950s, America has seen India as an example of democracy in Asia,” Qing wrote on the official newspaper of Communist Party of China. “In the so-called Indo-Pacific Strategy Report released by the US, India is viewed as an important geopolitical partner of the US, as the two countries share a common ideology and similar political system.”

“The Internet cannot be independent of national sovereignty,” he argued, adding: “It is a routine operation for governments all over the world to manage the Internet based on national interests, including shutting down the Internet in a state of emergency.”