Northeast burns over CAB, Army deployed in Guwahati
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Protestors burn hoardings and other materials during their march against the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2019, in Guwahati, Wednesday. Photo: PTI file

Northeast burns over CAB, Army deployed in Guwahati


Guwahati, the epicentre of anti-Citizenship Amendment Bill protests, was put under indefinite curfew and Army was deployed in the city and Assam Rifles personnel were deployed in Tripura on Wednesday (December 11) as the two northeastern states plunged into chaos over the hugely emotive bill.

Army PRO Lt Col P Khongsai said two Army columns have been deployed in Guwahati and are carrying out flag marches. Reports from Tinsukia quoting officials said the Army has been deployed in the district and was carrying out flag marches.

A Defence spokesman had earlier said in a statement in Shillong that two columns of the Army were deployed in Tripura. In a late evening clarification, it said that troops of the Assam Rifles, a paramilitary force commanded by Army officials, were pressed into service in Tripura.

Internet services cut

Internet services have been suspended in 10 districts of Assam, beginning 7 pm on Wednesday, as massive protests raged across cities, to prevent “misuse” of social media to disturb peace and tranquillity and maintain law and order.

Police use batons to disperse protestors during their march against the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2019, in Guwahati, Wednesday. Photo: PTI

Internet services have been suspended in Lakhimpur, Dhemaji, Tinsukia, Dibrugarh, Charaideo, Sivasagar, Jorhat, Golaghat, Kamrup (Metro) and Kamrup, a notification issued by Additional Chief Secretary (Home and Political Department) Kumar Sanjay Krishna, said.

Internet services are already suspended in the entire state of Tripura for 48 hours from 2 pm on Tuesday to thwart attempts by mischief mongers to disturb peace. An order issued by the Tripura government also prohibits SMSes on the networks of all mobile service providers.

Roads turn battle zones

As tens of thousands of anti-CAB protesters descended on the streets of Assam on Wednesday, clashing with police and plunging the state into chaos of a magnitude unseen since the violent 6-year movement by students that ended with the signing of the Assam accord, Guwahati was placed under curfew.

Also read | Assam, Tripura on the boil, Army called out to maintain peace

Initially, Assam police chief Bhaskar Jyoti Mahanta said that the curfew, which began at 6:15 pm on Wednesday, will continue till 7 am on Thursday. However, he later informed that it has been extended indefinitely.

Defying the curfew order protesters were still on the streets of Guwahati where most arterial roads were blocked. The Congress party has, meanwhile, called a shutdown in Tripura on Thursday.

Protestors burn tyres and public property on road during a protest against the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2019, in Guwahati, Wednesday. Photo: PTI

Though no party or student body had called a shutdown in Assam, protesters, a majority of them students, fought pitched battles with security forces, including in front of the secretariat, the seat of the BJP government.

Police fired tear gas shells and baton-charged protesters, who fought back.

Assam smouldered with protests rocking several parts of the state on the day the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill was hotly debated and passed in the Rajya Sabha after its passage by the Lok Sabha on Monday.

Hundreds of protesters detained

Some student leaders, who went live on national TV, claimed many agitators were injured in police action in front of the secretariat. According to unofficial accounts, hundreds of protesters have been detained in Guwahati and other places like Dibrugarh and Jorhat.

Similar incidents were reported from Tripura capital Agartala. Police opened fire in Assam capital Dispur to quell a protest by the agitators after water cannons, baton-charge and tear gas failed to rein them in. Police also fired at Ulubari, which is barely 500 m from the state police headquarters.

Also read | Internet cut in Tripura as anti-Citizenship Bill protests rock Northeast

A large number of agitated students blocked the road near the secretariat complex and pulled down the barricade erected on the arterial G S Road, provoking police action. Police burst teargas shells and baton-charged the protesters, who were seen lobbing back the shells at men in uniform.

Stage set for Modi-Abe meet destroyed

They also damaged a stage erected on the road for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s proposed summit meeting with his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe on Sunday.

The agitators pulled down hoardings and banners advertising the government’s welfare schemes and made a bonfire of those before the secretariat, damaged the police commissioner and joint police commissioner’s vehicles, set on fire buses and other vehicles in scenes reminiscent of the 6-year movement by students against illegal settlers that ended with the signing of the Assam accord in 1985.

Government employees join protest

In a rare show of solidarity with the protesters, government employees at the secretariat wore “gamosa,” the state’s symbol of honour, and stood behind the gates and chanted slogans against the CAB. The Assam Secretariat Employees’ Association also issued a statement supporting the protests and opposing the CAB.

People from northeastern states display placards during their protest against Citizenship Amendment Bill, 2019 at Jantar Mantar in New Delhi, Wednesday. Photo: PTI

Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal was reported to have been stranded for some time at the Guwahati airport on his return from Tezpur because of the agitation. Protesters blocked almost every road in Guwahati and state capital Dispur by placing burning discarded tyres, leaving officegoers stranded.

Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti (KMSS) of Akhil Gogoi has called a “hartal” to protest against the controversial bill until it is withdrawn. Life virtually came to a grinding halt in Lakhimpur, Dibrugarh, Tinsukia, Jorhat, Sivsagar, parts of Guwahati and in some districts of Lower Assam.

Also read | Citizenship Bill: Amit Shah holds meet with Northeast CMs, civil society

Gauhati and Dibrugarh Universities have postponed all examinations scheduled till December 14.

Classes in most universities and colleges were not held as students joined the protests. Schools were open but there were hardly any children as buses they were travelling on were stranded.

Anti-CAB agitators also clashed with police in Dibrugarh where rubber bullets and tear gas shells were fired to break up protests. A journalist was reported injured in a stone throwing incident in Dibrugarh.

In view of the protests, the Northeast Frontier Railway has cancelled many trains and rescheduled some that originate from the state. At least 31 trains have either been cancelled, short terminated or diverted anticipating “disruptions in train movement,” NF Railway Chief Public Relations Officer Subhanan Chanda said in a statement.

(With inputs from agencies)

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