Petrol bomb hurled near Shaheen Bagh protest site

Incident took place around 9.30am, no injuries reported

Shaheen Bagh protesters yet to receive permission to march to Shah’s residence Women and children hold placards during a silent protest against CAA and NRC at Shaheen Bagh | PTI

A petrol bomb was hurled by an unidentified person near the protest site at Shaheen Bagh on Sunday where women have been on a sit-in for over three months against the newly amended citizenship act, police said.

No injuries have been reported.

The incident took place at around 9.30 am, they said.

A police team has found five-six petrol-filled bottles at the site.

Protesters vowed to continue sit-in during Janta curfew

Protesters had earlier said that their sit-in would continue at Shaheen Bagh, even during the Janta curfew on Sunday. While the Delhi government had said that gatherings of more than 50 people would not be allowed, protesters said that not more than 50 people would be staging protests at a time.

The women have been blocking a side of a road connecting southeast Delhi to Noida since mid-December to protest against the amended citizenship law.

On Monday, the Delhi government said gatherings with more than 50 people were not allowed in the wake of the novel coronavirus pandemic. The size of gatherings has since been reduce to 20 people.

"It also applies to Shaheen Bagh," Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal had said.

The protesters on Friday told PTI that not more than 50 women had been staging protest at any given time.

"On Sunday, we will sit under small tents (at the protest side). Only two women will sit under each tent and maintain a distance of more than a metre between them," a protester who did not wish to be named said.

Another protester, Rizvana, said the women had been taking every precaution and they were covered in burqa all the time.

"Washing hands regularly is part of our lifestyle. We offer namaz five times a day and we wash our hands every time," she said.

Ritu Kushik, another protester, said women aged above 70 and children aged less than 10 were not being allowed at the protest site.

"The women are not sitting on the mattresses any more. Cots have been placed and there's a minimum distance of three metres between every two cots. Not more than two women can sit on a cot," he said.

Taseer Ahmad, one of the key organisers, said sanitisers and masks had been arranged in enough numbers, and the protest site was being disinfected at regular intervals. 

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