Withdraw CAA, Mamata Banerjee tells PM Modi

The state Congress has accused Ms Banerjee of having a tacit understanding with Mr Modi.

Update: 2020-01-11 19:42 GMT
Mamata Banerjee.

Kolkata: Prime Minister Narendra Modi met with West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on Saturday evening amid massive protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, National Register of Citizens (NRC) and the National Popula-tion Register (NPR) across Kolkata. At their meeting in Raj Bhavan, Ms Baner-jee raised her fierce opposition to the CAA and NRC and demanded that they be withdrawn.

Due to several large protests across the city, including at the airport and along the route his convoy was to take, Mr Modi was forced to avoid travel by road at least twice.

Mr Modi, who is on a two-day official visit to the state, had to fly in an IAF chopper from the Kolkata airport to the Royal Calcutta Turf Club from where he entered the Raj Bhavan in his convoy.

Many demonstrators were waving black flags and flying gas-filled black balloons though the city as they shouted slogans against the CAA, the NRC and carried banners that said, “Go Back Modi”.

While several protests were organised by Left and Congress supporters, students, youth and various apolitical outfits were also out on the streets venting their anger against CAA and NRC.

After her meeting, Ms Banerjee said that she told the PM that Bengal is against citizenship law, NRC, NPR and that she had asked the PM to withdraw CAA and NRC as no person should be thrown out of the country or face any discrimination and torture.

Soon after her meeting she rushed to her party’s dharna at Esplanade where she vowed to continue her movement to counter the allegation of the Left and Congress of her support to Mr Modi.

The state Congress has accused Ms Banerjee of having a tacit understanding with Mr Modi. “She boycotted the all-party meeting against citizenship law that Sonia Gandhi convened in Delhi on January 13 but fixed an appointment with Modi on January 11. Her real intentions are out in the open,” said Bengal Congress president Somen Mitra.

Modi and Banerjee’s one-to-one meeting was earlier likely to be held at 9 pm at Raj Bhavan. But it was brought forward due to a change in the PM’s itinerary following Mr Modi’s wish to stretch his visit to Belur Math, the headquarters of Ramakrishna Mission in Howrah, and spend the night there amidst speculation of his meditation on the occasion of youth icon Swami Vivekananda's birth anniversary on Sunday.

She said, “Since the PM came on a visit to our state, it is my constitutional responsibility and also courtesy to meet him. I have told the PM, since you have come here as my guest, I do not know if I should tell you about it or not. We are against the CAA, NRC and NPR. A movement has been underway against the three across the country. We certainly want no discrimination among the people, no person be dropped out or faces any kind of torture.”

She elaborated, “I have requested the PM to look into it. I also urged him to reconsider the CAA and NRC. We want these be withdrawn.”

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