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Video Editor: Sandeep Suman
As India grapples with massive protests against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act and the National Register of Citizens, people across the world have come out in a show of unity, to reject the implementation of the contentious Act.
The protests were centred on concerns about how the content and spirit of CAA threatens the very essence of India’s social and secular fabric.
Protesters said that the combination of CAA and NRC violates the principles of equality and secularism that the Indian Constitution enshrines.
While, students at New York university shouted ‘Halla Bol’, others stood in solidarity with protesters back home in India humming ‘Hum Honge Kamyaab’.
Hundreds of students and other groups gathered around the statue of Mahatma Gandhi at Parliament Square in London on Saturday to protest against CAA and NRC.
The peaceful protest, called with a message to "Defend the Indian Constitution", brought together a number of UK-based South Asian organisations who chanted slogans of 'Azadi' and waved the Indian Tricolour and placards calling for a withdrawal of CAA and NRC.
Indian-Americans and Indian students held peaceful protests against the Act in the US cities of Chicago and Boston, saying this is a step towards ‘rupturing India's social fabric.’
About 150 people marched to the Indian consulate from the Tribune Tower in Chicago.
Braving the harsh cold, demonstrators assembled at The Hague in a large group to oppose the Citizenship Act.
People in Barcelona also took to streets to show solidarity with those protesting against CAA in India.
Apart from these cities, protesters from Massachusetts, New York, and Berlin also came out in protest against the controversial Act.
In Geneva, protesters read aloud a part of the constitution to reject CAA and NRC.
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