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Regular-article-logo Friday, 26 April 2024

Joint anti-CAA protest plan in Kerala

The over three-hour-long meeting was attended by leaders, MLAs, MPs and representatives of various outfits

PTI Thiruvananthapuram Published 29.12.19, 09:48 PM
“While taking out protests jointly, we will get strength more than we can imagine. The country itself will accept it as a model,” chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan said

“While taking out protests jointly, we will get strength more than we can imagine. The country itself will accept it as a model,” chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan said (Wikipedia)

A meeting of various political parties and socio-religious outfits, convened by Kerala chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan here, on Sunday decided to hold joint protests against the controversial Citizenship (Amendment) Act.

The over three-hour-long meeting, attended by leaders, MLAs, MPs and representatives of various outfits, entrusted the chief minister and the Opposition leader in the Assembly, Ramesh Chennithala, to hold discussions and decide upon the further course of action.

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Among the recommendations that emerged were the government should move court and convene a special Assembly session, Vijayan said.

To protect the Constitution and secularism, there is a need to put up a united fight at this juncture, a release quoting him said.

“While taking out protests jointly, we will get strength more than we can imagine. The country itself will accept it as a model,” he said, adding any action to divide people on religious lines will not be accepted in Kerala.

The chief minister cautioned that many protests, including by communal and extremist elements, were being held in many places and it was necessary to keep them at bay.

The government would not intervene in the protests being held for just causes, he added.

After the meeting, Chennithala told reporters that different kinds of joint protests would be held in the state against the CAA.

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