
Cops deny permission for protests against Waqf, UCC
Ahmedabad: Muslim outfits in Gujarat have planned widespread protests against the Unified Waqf Management, Empowerment, Efficiency and Development (UMEED) Act and the bid to bring in the Uniform Civil Code (UCC) in the state.
However, they are finding it difficult to get police permission to stage demonstrations or take out a rally, leading to allegations of restriction on
freedom of expression
.
The Gujarat Muslim Hit Rakshak Samiti, formed by more than half a dozen different Muslim outfits to raise issues related to the Waqf Amendment Act and UCC, announced on Monday that it planned to form a human chain at Nehru Bridge on Tuesday evening, with the participation of over 2,000 people expected. However, the samiti has not been granted permission for this programme by the city police. Samiti members met the police commissioner but failed to secure the permission.
"While police have refused to grant formal permission, they have conveyed that we should wrap up the programme in 10 minutes. This is not possible, and we will go ahead with the programme even without the permission," said Iqbal Beg Mirza of All India Muslim Majlis-e-Mushawarat. Mirza said that the police did not grant permission to Muslims in Dholka and Himmatnagar on Sunday. "As a last resort, we will move the Gujarat high court," he said. However, a citizen from Banaskantha withdrew his petition from the HC on Monday, complaining against the non-granting of permission by the police to hold a protest.
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STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The Shadow of 1971 The Awami League is more than just a political party. It is inseparable from the very founding of Bangladesh. It was under the leadership of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, its founding leader, that Bangladesh was born in 1971 after a brutal liberation war against Pakistan. To ban such a party outright—no matter how controversial its recent leadership—undermines the entire premise of inclusive democratic politics in the country. When Yunus's interim government invoked the Anti-Terrorism Act to outlaw the Awami League and cited the deaths of over 1,400 people during the 2024 protests as justification, the move drew international condemnation and domestic concern. Even more troubling is the expansion of the International Crimes (Tribunals) Act (ICT Act) to allow entire political entities to be held collectively accountable. 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