Thursday, May 14, 2026
ADVT 
International

Freedom Of Expression Under Threat In India, Say Rights Activists In US

, 29 Jan, 2020 09:55 PM

    Terming India’s amended Citizenship Act as anti-minority, a group of eminent human rights and social activists, including Magsaysay Award winner Sandeep Pandey, has claimed that the freedom of expression is under threat in the world’s largest democracy.


    The Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) was passed in December last year, prompting protests across India.


    According to the CAA, members of Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi and Christian communities who have come from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan till December 31, 2014 following religious persecution there will get Indian citizenship.


    During a US Congressional briefing on the ‘Implications of India’s Citizenship Law’ held at the Capitol Building on Monday, eminent human rights and social activists claimed that the freedom of expression is under threat in India.


    “In 27 years of working as an activist, I have experienced unprecedented curb on fundamental rights of freedom of expression, to assemble peacefully and to move about anywhere within India over the past six months,” Pandey said.


    Uttar Pradesh Police last week booked rights activist Pandey for allegedly making inappropriate comments against Hindutva ideologue Vir Savarkar while addressing anti-citizenship law protesters at the Aligarh Muslim University.


    The briefing was organised by the Indian American Muslim Council, the Hindus for Human Rights, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) and American Muslim advocacy body Emgage Action.


    However, there was no panellist to represent the perspective of the other side.


    Pandey alleged that the present dispensation had become the enemy of people who participated in protests against the CAA and the proposed nationwide National Register of Citizens (NRC).


    The NRC exercise was conducted in Assam on the directions of the Supreme Court.


    Prime Minister Narendra Modi last month said his government had never discussed the NRC since coming to power for the first time in 2014 and it was done only in Assam.


    Harrison Akins, policy analyst (South Asia) from the US Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), claimed that the recent events in India had sparked great outrage not only by governments and international organisations, but also from citizens of all faiths across India who had been bravely exercising their democratic right of peaceful protest against the CAA.


    Indian officials have maintained that the CAA is a matter entirely internal to the country and the law was adopted through democratic means after a public debate in both houses of Parliament.


    Prime Minister Modi on Tuesday said his government brought in the CAA to correct “historical” injustices and recalled the Nehru-Liaquat pact to assert that the law fulfilled India’s “old promise” to religious minorities in the neighbouring countries.


    Speaking at the Congressional briefing, Akins alleged that in recent years, conditions for religious minorities had “deteriorated precipitously” in India.


    “From instituting more aggressive bans and stricter punishments for cow slaughter and religious conversion activities, minorities are increasingly marginalised and discriminated against,” he claimed.


    Francisco Bencosme, Asia Pacific Advocacy Manager of the Amnesty International USA, demanded that the Indian government should “repeal the CAA” and “stop cracking down on protesters”.


    “We ask here today for the Modi government to repeal the CAA and stop cracking down on protesters and ensure that its citizens have the right to peaceful assembly,” he said.


    John Sifton, Asia Advocacy Director of Human Rights Watch, and Waris Hussain, adjunct professor, Howard University School of Law, also spoke at the Congressional briefing.


    In recent weeks, there have been a series of rallies organised across the US both for and against the CAA.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pakistan's Heaviest Man Undergoes Successful Liposuction Surgery

    Pakistan's Heaviest Man Undergoes Successful Liposuction Surgery
    Noorul Hassan, 55, a resident of Sadiqabad, some 400kms from Lahore, was shifted to a military hospital in Lahore on June 18 after the wall of his house was broken by emergency service personnel with the help of the army.  

    Pakistan's Heaviest Man Undergoes Successful Liposuction Surgery

    Pakistan’s Peshawar To Open Country’s First Exclusive School For Sikhs

    Pakistan’s Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) government has allocated funds to build the first Sikh-only school of the province in the budget for the upcoming fiscal year 2019-20.

    Pakistan’s Peshawar To Open Country’s First Exclusive School For Sikhs

    Indian Consulate In Dubai Offer Help To 300 Unpaid Workers

    Indian Consulate In Dubai Offer Help To 300 Unpaid Workers
    The workers, many of them from India, are facing extreme shortage of food and health issues due to stress. Many of them want to return to India, but have their visas expired, which the employer has refused to renew.

    Indian Consulate In Dubai Offer Help To 300 Unpaid Workers

    4 Indian Women Duped By Employer In Dubai Rescued: MEA

    4 Indian Women Duped By Employer In Dubai Rescued: MEA
    Four Indian women workers, who were duped and detained illegally by their employer in Dubai, are being repatriated back to India, Minister of State for External Affairs V Muraleedharan said on Friday.

    4 Indian Women Duped By Employer In Dubai Rescued: MEA

    India May Deliberately Lose To Keep Pakistan Out Of Semis, Says Basit Ali

    Pakistan journalist Saj Sadiq posted a video of Ali making these comments on a TV show on Pakistan-based channel Ary News before Sarfaraz Ahmed’s men defeated New Zealand by six wickets in Birmingham on Wednesday.

    India May Deliberately Lose To Keep Pakistan Out Of Semis, Says Basit Ali

    European Heatwave: France Roasts At 45.9 Degrees Celsius, Two Die In Spain

    European Heatwave: France Roasts At 45.9 Degrees Celsius, Two Die In Spain
    France has hit its highest ever recorded temperature -- 45.9 degrees Celsius -- amid a heatwave in Europe which is disrupting normal life, claiming lives as well as prompting governments to issue health alerts.    

    European Heatwave: France Roasts At 45.9 Degrees Celsius, Two Die In Spain