Close to 1,000 people protested against the Centre’s citizenship matrix within the heart of the town on Friday, shattering an extended
lull triggered by the Covid pandemic.Deafening roars of azaadi and “we
will not show papers” posters made a comeback on busy roads as the
protesters marched from Moulali to Esplanade where they staged a
meeting. Many of the marchers had come from the districts, like Nadia
and Murshidabad. Some of them reached Calcutta last night.
December 11 was chosen because the Citizenship Amendment Act was gone by Parliament on an equivalent
day last year. The campaign against the citizenship troika — National
Register of Citizens, National Population Register and CAA — was at its
peak when the coronavirus brought everything to a grinding halt.The
rally was organised by Anti-NRC People’s Movement, a joint platform of
21 organizations campaigning against the citizenship thrust. Groups of individuals started arriving at the meeting point — Ram Leela ground on CIT Road in Moulali — on foot, mini vans and buses.
A mini-truck parked on the road became a makeshift stage for speakers.
“The Narendra Modi-led government has used the pandemic and lockdown as a tool to stifle dissent and convey another series of anti-people laws just like the
labour code and farm bills. The government had kept the NRC-NPR-CAA
combine in the cupboard like mothballed woollens but they would bring it
out any time. We should be alert,” said Prasun Chatterjee of Azaad Gana
Morcha.The BJP’s Bengal minder Kailash Vijayvargiya said on Sunday that
the Centre might implement the CAA from next month to confer
citizenship on a large section of refugees living in Bengal.
“From
infiltrators to termites, we remember every word that was used to
describe us, citizens of this country,” said Kasturi Basu of Humans of
Patuli.
A group of kids
from Janaganamana Sanskritik Manch performed a series of songs — most
of them tweaks of popular Bengali songs. “Batashe bohichhe bish, bukete
lagilo chot, raja je kohilo heshe NRC eshe gechhe (The air is crammed with poison, the guts wounded. The king says smilingly that NRC is here),” said one song.
The
opening lines of another song: “Tora je ja bolish bhai, raja’r shosta
mojur chai (No matter what you say, the king wants cheap labour).”Almost
every speaker said the citizenship thrust mirrored blatant religious
discrimination and its main objective was creating a vast pool of cheap
labourers for big companies.“This government has sold itself to big
corporate houses and will turn people languishing in detention camps
into cheap labourers,” said Chandan Bhattacharjee of the Sramik-Krishak
Ekta Manch, who had come from Jaynagar in South 24-Parganas.The rally
started from Ramlila Maidan in Moulali around 2.30pm and its head
reached the front of the Calcutta Municipal Corporation headquarters on
SN Banerjee Road around 4pm. “System error… Not found — Hindurashtra,”
read one poster. “We want rights, not riots,” read another.A police
officer put the number of marchers at over 500 but organisers said more
than 1,000 people had turned up. “It is a big number because many
people, even in Calcutta, are still not ready to join a large group for
fear of the virus,” an organiser said.Many marchers on Friday had
posters of political prisoners like Umar Khalid, Sharjeel Imam and
Varavara Rao. The protesters demanded their “immediate release”.
Tricolours
and large banners fluttered under the canopy of trees dotting the road
that connects Moulali with Esplanade. A third of the marchers were
women, who often out-shouted the lads in sloganeering.
Banojyotsna Lahiri, a Presidency and JNU alumna and a friend of Khalid, walked in the rally on Friday.
“In
Delhi, a protest march is usually limited to the stretch between Mandi
House and Jantar Mantar. It is extremely tough to protest anywhere else.
Being able to walk in a rally through a residential area like this is a
big deal. With people watching from their balconies and shopkeepers
coming outside stores, the protest becomes so organic,” she said.
Arup
Majumdar, the convener of the Anti-NRC People’s Movement, said a
section of people opposed to the citizenship matrix were now more
bothered with livelihood problems posed by the pandemic. “Since there is
no strong narrative on the part of the government right now, they think
the NRC-NPR-CAA is not on Modi-Shah’s immediate agenda. But the BJP
will suddenly strike with these tools, maybe just before the Bengal
election. If we do not step up the vigil now, we cannot do much then,”
said Majumdar.
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