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NEW DELHI: Police fired tear-gas and struck demonstrators with batons on Sunday in Delhi University, against Muslims and undermines the secular foundations of India.
The third day of what had been a peaceful demonstration against the law, passed by India’s Parliament last week, descended into chaos Sunday afternoon. Three buses were set on fire, police officials said.
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Chinmoy Biswal, a top police official, said that six police personnel were injured in the melee in an upscale enclave of south Delhi. Student organizers blamed outsiders for the violence.
“We have time and again maintained that our protests are peaceful and non-violent,” they said in a statement. “We stand by this approach and condemn any party involved in the violence.”
The escalation came as authorities in India’s northeastern state of Assam on the border with Bangladesh, where violence erupted after the law’s passage.
Demonstrators fear an influx of foreigners will dilute native Assamese people’s political sway and culture.
Five people have been killed in ongoing protests over the law that, for the first time in Indian history, grants citizenship on the basis of religion.
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“Police have entered the campus by force, no permission was given. Our staff and students are being beaten up and forced to leave the campus,” said Waseem Ahmed Khan, a top official of Jamia Millia Islamia University.
Many of the injured students were taken to nearby hospitals, including Holy Family, where about 26 students were treated, according to Father George, the hospital’s spokesman.
“The police beat me mercilessly after pinning me down to the ground.
My other friends weren’t spared either,” said Mujeeb Raza, a student who was being treated at the nearby Al-Shifa hospital.