Publish date12 Mar 2024 - 9:55
Story Code : 628011

Ahead of India enacts Islamophobic law to woo voters ahead of election

The Indian government has implemented an anti-Muslim controversial citizenship law in an effort to woo the nationalist voters weeks ahead of the general elections in the country.
Ahead of India enacts Islamophobic law to woo voters ahead of election
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "government announces implementation of Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA)," a government spokesman said on Monday.

The law allows Indian citizenship for non-Muslim refugees from three of India’s neighboring countries, namely Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan, who fled to Hindu-majority India before December 31, 2014.

Billed as "Islamophobic" by critics, the CAA was passed in 2019. Its implementation was, however, delayed after the outbreak of protests, during which more than a 100 people were reportedly killed, most of them Muslims.

The law's implementation came as the country is expected to soon announce dates for the elections, which is likely to be held in April or May, with Modi widely favored to win a third term in office.

Also on Monday, the main opposition Congress party said the law's implementation had been intentionally timed to come in the weeks that preceded the polls.

The opposition Communist Party of India, which rules the southern state of Kerala, meanwhile, called for state-wide protests on Tuesday.

"This is to divide the people, incite communal sentiments, and undermine the fundamental principles of the Constitution," Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan said in a statement. "This move to stratify Indian citizens who have equal rights, must be opposed unitedly."

Many among India's 200-million-strong Muslims, who account for the world’s third-largest Muslim population, fear that the CAA's implementation could serve as a precursor to enactment a proposed National Register of Citizens (NRC).
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