Authorities in India’s west Bengal vote against controversial citizenship law

Tue, Jan 28, 2020
By publisher
2 MIN READ

Foreign

LOCAL authorities of India’s West Bengal state on Monday passed a resolution against a controversial citizenship law, which was accused of discriminating against Muslims.

According to the country’s Republic broadcaster, West Bengal became the fourth out of 28 Indian states to vote against the law citizenship law.

The law came into being on January 10 and streamlines citizenship for Hindus, Christians and other non-Muslims who have fled Muslim-majority countries to India. The other states include Kerala, Punjab, and Rajasthan.

Earlier, India’s Supreme Court gave the government a month to respond to a slew of petitions against the citizenship law.

The top court refused to put the law on hold until it heard the governments’ response to more than a hundred petitions challenging the legislation on the basis of constitutionality.

India’s parliament passed the Citizenship Amendment Act in December seeking to streamline obtaining the Indian citizenship for illegal immigrants of persecuted non-Muslim minorities from neighboring countries, including Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh.

The bill, however, sparked violent protests across India for allegedly discriminating against Muslims, who form a 200-million-strong minority in the secular country.

According to the Indian Muslim community, the law violates the constitution, as it oppresses a group of citizens in a formally secular country on religious grounds.

The residents of the country’s northeastern states fear that now millions of people from Bangladesh could legally settle in their regions, which could threaten the interests of the local population.

NAN

– Jan. 28, 2020 @ 08:25 GMT |

 

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