Mamata Banerjee leads rally aganist CAA, asks governor to fall in line

18 Dec 2019

Trinamool Congress supremo and West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee, who is spearheading an anti-Citizenship Amendment Act agitation in the state, has challenged the central government to implement the Act in West Bengal has asked the state governor to fall in line to maintain peace in the state.

Governor Jagdeep Dhankhar had called the rallies "unconstitutional and inflammatory" and urged the chief minister to devote time to “retrieve the grim situation”.
Mamata who on Monday vowed on not implement either the Citizenship Amendment Act or the National Citizens register, on Tuesday also headed a rally of likeminded groups, including Bangladeshi settlers in the state, through the heart of Kolkata to vent ire on the central government.
Banerjee alleged that a few people were paid by the BJP to perpetrate violence in the state, even as she blamed some powers from outside West Bengal “acting as friends” of the Muslim community for vandalism and arson.
The TMC supremo, who led the rally from Red Road to Jorasanko Thakur Bari, the ancestral house of Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore in north Kolkata, was joined by thousands of supporters with placards saying “No CAA” and “No NRC”.
Do you trust us? Do you have faith in us? If you do, remember, CAB will implemented over my dead body. NRC will be implemented over my dead body. We will not allow CAB-NRC : Didi pic.twitter.com/PhA68iHNUc — All India Trinamool Congress (@AITCofficial) December 16, 2019
“There are some forces from outside the state, who are acting as friends of minorities and have indulged in this violence. These forces are stooges of the BJP, don’t fall into their trap,” Banerjee said in an apparent reference to Assaduddin Owaisi’s AIMIM with whom she got into a war of words recently.
“As long as I am alive, I will never implement the citizenship law or NRC in the state. You can very well dismiss my government or put me behind bars but I will never implement this black law. We will continue to protest democratically till this law is scrapped. If they want to implement it in Bengal they will have to do it over my dead body,” she said.
If the BJP thinks it can “bulldoze” everybody to implement the law, then they are wrong, she asserted.
“No one will be ousted from the state. We believe in coexistence of all religions, caste and creed,” Banerjee said as she read out an ‘oath’ for her party workers at the beginning of the rally near a statue of BR Ambedkar in Red Road.
She urged agitators to not indulge in vandalism and arson, and said it will only undermine the very motive of the protest.
“If you indulge in violence, you cause lot of inconvenience to the common people. Those who support your cause gets angry, and you would lose their support,” she said.
She further alleged that railway services have been suspended in most parts of the state by the centre “just because few trains have been set on fire”.
The chief minister also condemned the police action on rioting students at Jamia Millia Islamia in Delhi and said it should not have happened.
Slamming the BJP, Banerjee said the party should take care of the states it rules in Northeast before “lecturing others” on law and order.
“The centre had asked me whether I need central forces to control the situation. I have told them that I have full faith on my state police. The BJP is busy lecturing others but it should first take care of law and order situation in states where they are in power,” she said.
Banerjee also urged people of the state to send “lakhs of letters” to President Ram Nath Kovind, opposing the amended Citizenship Act and the NRC and, if needed, use “own blood instead of ink” to write them.
Banerjee, who has been at the forefront in opposing the NRC and the citizenship law, is leading mega rallies crisscrossing the city and neighbouring Howrah in protest against the law for three consecutive days, beginning with the Red Road-Jorasanko rally.
The state has seen several incidents of arson and vandalism in the past few days by people protesting against the law with a number railway stations being set ablaze and many trains burnt.