The massive protests across the state against the Citizenship Amendment Bill (CAB), now an Act, are currently also led by the AASU, which has asserted that it will be unrelenting in its battle.

Current Affairs:They originate from heap foundations and beliefs however at the dissent scenes in the city and a few pieces of the state, they all join against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act as they trust it’s an “ambush” on Assamese culture and character.
Forty-eight-year-old Guwahati occupant Upendrajit Kalita says he felt a “feeling of disloyalty” the day Parliament passed the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, charging that the enactment goes “against the Assam Accord” which was marked to secure the enthusiasm of the local Assamese individuals.
Kalita, who works in a promotion office, had taken an interest in the noteworthy six-year-long Assam Movement drove by the All Assam Students’ Union (AASU) that had finished in the marking of the Assam Accord in 1985.
The enormous fights over the state against the Citizenship Amendment Bill (CAB), presently an Act, are as of now likewise drove by the AASU, which has attested that it will be unwavering in its fight.
From Guwahati, the operational hub of the fights, to Jorhat, and from Dibrugarh to Sivasagar, dissidents have for all intents and purposes carried the state to a stop, requesting that “the CAA must go”, in any case the fomentation will be ventured up.
“One of the provisions of the Accord commanded recognition and expelling of every illicit vagrant without separating based on religion and the all-acknowledged cut-off year of 1971. Provision 6 of it was to give established insurance to unique residents of Assam,” Kalita stated, and asserted the CAA “conflicts with the entirety of that”.