The national capital witnessed the highest number of agitations in at least eight years in 2019, government data reveals. According to the data, people from all walks of life – students, airline professionals, lawyers and even police personnel – took to the streets in Delhi to voice their grievances.
Figures from the Delhi Police show that approximately 12,652 demonstrations, dharnas and protest meetings were organised in 2019, a jump of 46% from the 2018 numbers, Hindustan Times reported.
This has been the highest since 2011, the earliest year for which data was made available. The previous highest number of protests (11,158) was witnessed in 2015, the report said.
The data from the year 2019 only takes into account protests till 15 December and hence, does not include the ongoing demonstrations against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, which gained steam in the last two weeks of December.
The protests from the last two weeks of December – which saw demonstrations in universities against the CAA and a month-long protest by women residents of Shaheen Bagh –will be included when the figures are updated in early 2020, the report said.
When the data from the anti-CAA protests is included, the number will rise by at least another 500, a senior Delhi Police official was quoted as saying by Hindustan Times.
The data presented, has been compiled by the Delhi Police’s special branch, the intelligence wing of the city police, which shared the report with the local police.
Experts say the data indicates a growing sense of disappointment across various sections of the society, but it could also be read as a sign of a healthy democracy.
A former senior police officer, who led the state police of Uttar Pradesh and Punjab told Hindustan Times, said the rise in protests indicates growing dissent against the government. The former police officer stated that it wouldn’t be surprising if the spike was seen after the CAA protests, but added that the increase was recorded before the CAA demonstrations began. Prakash Singh, a proponent of police reforms, added that the spike in demonstrations is a sign of a healthy democracy.
Other experts have linked the demonstrations to dissatisfaction with government policies.
In the last week of November, 2019, at least 200 disabled protesters held a sit-in protest at central Delhi’s Mandi House over not being given an opportunity to apply for government jobs, the Hindustan Times report said.
The data from 2011 revealed the scale of the anti-corruption protests which saw tens of thousands of students, young people and professionals join a campaign that was led by activist Anna Hazare.
In 2012, Delhi’s streets were swamped by huge number of people protesting against the rape and murder of a 23-year-old medical student, ‘Nirbhaya’ on 16 December. Police records show that 8,405 protests took place that year.
The mob attack inside JNU last Sunday, 5 January, that left 35 people injured sparked large demonstrations in campuses across the country and on the streets. Against this backdrop, 2020 may also prove to be another torrid year.
(This article has been republished by The Quint, with inputs from Hindustan Times)
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