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Curfew relaxed in India’s northeastern state


Bangladeshpost
Published : 13 Dec 2019 06:29 PM | Updated : 05 Sep 2020 06:56 AM

Authorities relaxed curfew for six hours on Friday in violence-wracked parts of India's north-eastern state of Assam but shut schools until next week as protests continued against a new law that would grant citizenship to non-Muslims who migrated from neighbouring countries, report agencies.

Police said there was no violence overnight after they shot and killed two protesters who defied curfew in Gauhati, the capital of Assam state, on Thursday, and injured several others. Thousands of protesters lit bonfires and blocked streets, leading to clashes with police who fired at them.

As the curfew was relaxed at 7 a.m. on Friday, thousands of protesters started a hunger strike in Gauhati to protest the legislation.

India's ceremonial President Ram Nath Kovind late Thursday gave his assent to the Citizenship Amendment Bill, which was approved by the two houses of India's parliament earlier this week, making it a law.

Meanwhile, Japan's NHK public television said Friday that Japanese Prime Minister Shinze Abe is considering postponing his visit to India due to concerns about deteriorating security in the northeast, where he was scheduled to visit starting this Sunday.

NHK said a final decision is expected later Friday.

Japanese Foreign Ministry officials said that Abe was scheduled to hold talks with his Indian counterpart, Narendra Modi, in Gauhati to deepen security partnership and economic ties. It does not, however, extend to Rohingya Muslim refugees who fled persecution in Myanmar. Home Minister Amit Shah rejected criticism the legislation was anti-Muslim, saying it did not affect the existing path to citizenship available to all communities.