Anti-CAA protests: Indian Railways moots filing civil suit for losses in West Bengal

In West Bengal, the protests were a big show of strength for the ruling party which has been fiercely opposing the CAA. 

Anti-CAA protests: Indian Railways moots filing civil suit for losses in West Bengal

Kolkata: Indian Railways is planning to file a civil suit for losses over Rs 100 crore it suffered during protests against the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and National Register of Citizen (NRC) in the last few days in West Bengal. Railways would file the civil suit against the state authority as the law and order is the state subject, and the state government failed to maintain that, thereby, Railways had to bear huge losses. 

Recently, Railway services have been severely hit in West Bengal as anti-CAA protesters blocked railway tracks, ransacked some stations and set fire on railway tracks.

These incidents have irked Minister of State for Railways Suresh Angadi, who in response to a question in Hubballi on Tuesday, said that he has asked authorities to "shoot at sight" anybody who causes damage to Railway property. The reporters had asked him about the steps being taken to prevent damage to Railway property due to CAA related protests. 

Live TV

"If anyone is destroying railway property, then I ask the chief minister of the particular state to initiate stringent action just as Sardar Vallabhai Patel had taken to merge Hyderabad with India," he said.

The minister, who was peeved at protests turning violent, blamed the opposition for fanning the disturbance. Angadi said, "the opposition parties opposing the Citizenship Amendment Act should introspect. They are playing politics on this issue and destroying public property. I request the states concerned to initiate stringent action against them." 

In West Bengal, the protests were a big show of strength for the ruling party which has been fiercely opposing the CAA. 

On Thursday, Mamata targeted the Central government for trying to curb the peaceful protests being carried out, particularly by students, across the country against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act and NRC. 

"This government is scared of students. This government is scared of one of India`s most accomplished historians for speaking to the media on CAB and NRC and holding a poster of Gandhi ji. I condemn the detention of Ram Guha. We extend our full solidarity to all those detained," Banerjee`s tweet on Thursday read.

Mamata on Thursday demanded that an "impartial organisation" like the United Nations should form a committee to see how many people were in favour of the Citizenship Amendment Act. 

"Let there be an impartial organisation like United Nations or Human Rights Commission ...form a committee to see how many people are in favour or against the Citizenship Amendment Act," she said while addressing a gathering.

She also accused the BJP of "dividing" the country and said that the protests against the amended Citizenship Act will not stop unless the government withdraws the legislation, which aims to grant citizenship to non-Muslim refugees from three countries in India`s neighbourhood.

(With Agency Inputs)

Zee News App: Read latest news of India and world, bollywood news, business updates, cricket scores, etc. Download the Zee news app now to keep up with daily breaking news and live news event coverage.