Mr.Talha Posted June 17, 2021 Posted June 17, 2021 Natasha Narwal and Devangana Kalita had been kept in as police wanted time to verify their addresses. The judge in Delhi said this was "not plausible". The students had joined a protest last year against a controversial citizenship law, a day before deadly riots broke out in Delhi. They were arrested in May 2020 under a stringent anti-terrorism law. "We have received tremendous support inside jail and we will continue our struggle," Ms Narwal told reporters outside Tihar jail. She and Ms Kalita are founding members of Pinjra Tod (Break the Cage), a po[CENSORED]r student movement that wants women to reclaim public spaces. Granting bail on Tuesday, the judges had criticised the government for confusing the right to protest with terrorist activity. Devangana Kalita at a Pinjra Tod protest IMAGE COPYRIGHTPINJRA TOD image captionDevangana Kalita was arrested last year on charges of sedition A third activist, Asif Iqbal Tanha, also walked free on Thursday. He too was arrested in May last year for taking part in protests before the rioting, and spent two more days in jail despite having been bailed on Tuesday. Lawyers for the three have accused the police of using delaying tactics to keep them in jail - and on Thursday, judge Ravinder Bedi ordered them to be immediately released. The Delhi police appeal against their bail will be heard by the Supreme Court on Friday. Why journalists in India are under attack Why is India denying prisoners spectacles and straws? The oldest person accused of terrorism in India India jails pregnant student despite Covid-19 risk The Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) sparked massive protests across India. Critics say it discriminates against Muslims, a charge the government denies. One of the protests in Delhi sparked a political rally in favour of the law the following day.
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