Shahriar Alam cancels India visit amid citizenship law tension
This is the fourth time Dhaka has called off high-level interactions with India in one month
Deputy Foreign Minister of Bangladesh Shahriar Alam has cancelled his visit to India amid tension over Citizenship Amendment Act.
The state minister for foreign affairs was expected to participate in the Raisina Dialogue - an annual multilateral conference hosted by the Ministry of External Affairs in Delhi this week, reports NDTV.
This is the fourth time Dhaka has called off high-level interactions with India in one month.
Last month the Bangladesh Home and Foreign Ministers cancelled their respective visits and, a week later, talks over the sharing of river data were also cancelled.
The cancellations come amid tension between the two countries over the contentious citizenship law and NRC exercise (National Register of Citizens), as well as Union Home Minister Amit Shah's allegations of minorities being targeted by the Bangladeshi government.
The Indian government later clarified that Shah's remarks were meant for "abuse took place during previous government and military rule".
Last month the Bangladesh Foreign Minister, AK Abdul Momen, delivered a cautious warning to India over the citizenship law. Speaking to reporters in Dhaka before his proposed visit to Delhi, Momen said allegations of repression of minorities by his government were "untrue".
He also praised India for being a "historically tolerant country" but said that legacy of secularism could be "weakened". He added: "... naturally our people expect India won't do anything that could create anxiety among them".
Hours after he cancelled his visit, Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan called off a visit to Meghalaya amid violent anti-CAA protests in the state.
The Citizenship (Amendment) Act, or CAA, which came into effect Friday night, is the first to make religion a test of citizenship. The government says it will benefit non-Muslim refugees fleeing religious persecution from one of three Muslim-dominated neighbouring countries (including Bangladesh), if they fled to India before 2015.
Critics say it discriminates against Muslims and violates Constitution's secular tenets.
Powered through parliament last month by Amit Shah, the CAA has sparked furious nationwide protests, with more than 20 dead in Uttar Pradesh alone and lakhs taking to the streets across the country. The protests have also seen violent clashes at several places in UP, Delhi, the North East, and Bengal and in South India.