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CAB: 48-Hour Bandh Hits Normal Life in Parts of Assam on Day One

PTI |
On Tuesday, Left-democratic organisations and North East Students Organisation have also called for a bandh.
CAB: 48-Hour Bandh Hits Normal Life in Parts of Assam on Day One

Image Courtesy: The Wire

Guwahati: The 48-hour Assam bandh called by the All Moran Students' Union (AMSU) to protest against the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill and granting of Scheduled Tribe status to six communities on Monday affected normal life in several districts on the first day, officials said.

On Tuesday, the North East Students Organisation (NESO), the apex body of all the student bodies of the region, has called an 11-hour Northeast bandh. Nagaland where the Hornbill Festival is going on, has been exempted from the purview of the shutdown.

Left-democratic organisations have also called a 12-hour Assam bandh on Tuesday

The Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2019, which seeks to give Indian nationality to non-Muslim refugees from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan facing religious persecution there, was introduced in Lok Sabha by Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Monday.

Shops, markets and financial institutions kept their shutters down, while schools and colleges were closed in the districts of Lakhimpur, Dhemaji, Tinsukia, Dibrugarh, Sivasagar, Jorhat, Majuli, Morigaon, Bongaigaon, Udalguri, Kokrajhar and Baksa after the bandh began at 5 am.

The bandh evoked no impact in Bengali-dominated Barak Valley districts of Cachar, Karimganj and Hailakandi as well as the hill districts of Karbi Anglong and Dima Hasao, according to officials. The impact of the bandh was negligible in Guwahati, they said.

Private offices were closed in the bandh-hit areas and attendance in government offices was thin, they added.

In many places, protestors burnt tyres and blocked national highways but the police swung into action and cleared the roads. Some state-run long distance buses plied with police escort, they said.

The police resorted to lathi-charge to disperse a group of agitators who clashed with police personnel in Dibrugarh and Guwahati while trying to stop movement of vehicles.

Foreign and domestic tourists in rhino-habitat Kaziranga National Park and Jorhat were stranded due to the bandh with no public transport available for their travel to Guwahati to board flights and trains.

The protestors in many places also took out 'funeral processions' of Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal for his alleged failure to oppose the CAB which, they claimed, will threaten the existence and language of the indigenous people.

Besides protesting against the CAB, the AMSU's bandh was called to press for its demand for granting of Scheduled Tribe status to Moran and five other communities - Tai Ahom, Koch Rajbongshi, Chutia, Tea Tribes and Matak - of the state.

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