Artistes From Assam At Forefront of Protest Against CAA | The Wire | Assam Protests Against CAA
  • 3 years ago
Note: Actress Seema Biswas' name has been wrongly written as Seema Guha. Seema Biswas joined singers, Papon and Joi Barua, among others in Mumbai on December 16 for a protest of Assamese fraternity against the Act.

The opposition to the Citizenship (Amendment) Act has been vociferous in Assam.
It has reminded many of the tumultuous agitations against undocumented foreigners in the state between 1979 and 1985. Along with the masses, the artiste fraternity of Assam was at the forefront of that agitation, led by students. Among others, there was Bhupen Hazarika composing songs about the times when not advising the students. This time too, the artiste community of the state is not found to be lacking in providing their support to the public protest against the controversial Citizenship (Amendment) Act. The Act would violate the principal clause of the Assam Accord – the exclusive citizenship cut-off date for the State, March 24, 1971.
That Accord had brought to an end the six-year-long anti-foreigner agitation.
While popular singer and youth icon Zubeen Garg has been leading the students from the front, Padma Shri awarded filmmaker from Assam, Jahnu Barua, who withdrew his film from a government-sponsored event in protest. Artistes like Ravi Sharma and Jatin Bora, members of the ruling BJP, walked out of the party and joined the protests. Mumbai based singers, Papon and Joi Barua, actress Seema Guha, Jahnu Barua among others, led a protest of the Assamese fraternity in the city against the Act. On December 16, the state’s artistes got together to organise a protest rally in Guwahati’s Chandmari area where they addressed an estimated crowd of over fifty thousand people.

Like our work? Click here to support The Wire: https://thewire.in/support

The founding premise of The Wire is this: if good journalism is to survive and thrive, it can only do so by being both editorially and financially independent. This means relying principally on contributions from readers and concerned citizens who have no interest other than to sustain a space for quality journalism. As a publication, The Wire will be firmly committed to the public interest and democratic values.
We publish in four different languages!
For English, visit www.thewire.in
for Hindi: http://thewirehindi.com/
for Urdu: http://thewireurdu.com
for Marathi: https://marathi.thewire.in
If you are a young writer or a creator, you can submit articles, essays, photos, poetry – anything that’s straight out of your imagination – to LiveWire, The Wire’s portal for the young, by the young. https://livewire.thewire.in/
You can also follow The Wire’s social media platforms and engage with us.
Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/TheWire/
https://www.facebook.com/TheWireHindi/
https://www.facebook.com/TheWireUrdu/
https://www.facebook.com/TheWireMarathi/
Twitter
https://twitter.com/thewire_in
https://twitter.com/thewirehindi
https://twitter.com/TheWireUrdu
https://twitter.com/TheWireMarathi
https://twitter.com/livewire
Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/thewirein/
https://www.instagram.com/livewirein/
Don’t forget to hit the subscribe button to never miss a video from The Wire!
Recommended