The CAA — Why is India’s citizenship law contentious?

The CAA — Why is India’s citizenship law contentious?

Muslim groups, opposition parties and rights activists say the law discriminates against Muslims and undermines the country’s secular constitution.

India this week implemented the contentious 2019 Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), sparking sporadic protests and a war of words between Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government and opposition groups weeks before national elections are held.

Here is a look at the law, its implications and the concerns surrounding it.

discriminates against Muslims and undermines the country’s secular constitution. Some also question why it does not include Muslims fleeing Buddhist-majority Sri Lanka and Myanmar.

In states such as Assam in the east, CAA has sparked concerns about increased migration from neighbouring Bangladesh, which has been a flashpoint in the region for decades.

On the other hand, some Muslims in Assam and West Bengal fear that the law, combined with a proposed National Register of Citizens, could be used to declare them illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and take away their citizenship.

Leaders of some opposition parties have termed the legislation “communal and divisive”.

The US government and the United Nations have expressed concerns, with the UN calling CAA “fundamentally discriminatory in nature”.

politically motivated and spurred by misconceptions, adding that the law is only meant to grant citizenship, not revoke it.

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