Guntur: AIMIM chief Asaduddin Owaisi on Sunday urged Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister YS Jagan Mohan Reddy to put a stay on National Population Register (NPR) in the state by likening it with the National Register of Citizens (NRC) and asserted that both exercises are against the poor of the country.
"We request CM Reddy to put a stay on NPR exercise which is scheduled to begin from April 1. Had his father Rajashekar Reddy been alive today, he would have stopped NPR. There is no difference in NPR and NRC. They are both sides of the same coin," Owaisi said at a rally here.
"If NRC will be implemented in the country, experts have written that names of at least 8 crores will not come in the list. Where will they be kept? The stay on NPR should be like Kerala. NPR and NRC are not only against Muslims, Dalits, tribals, and Christians but they are against every poor of India," he said.
"Rules of NPR and NRC are more dangerous than TADA and POTA. If you want to save yourself from trouble in the future, then we have to protest against NPR, NRC, and CAA today," he said.
The Lok Sabha MP from Hyderabad said that the state government has no right to make a questionnaire for NPR.
"If CM Reddy comes under pressure from BJP and PM and implements the NPR then we will boycott it. If anybody comes to your house, then put a national flag at your house and show it to him and tell not to come again," he said.
"Reddy should not say that he will put NPR form of 2010 during the exercise. The state government has no right to make a questionnaire as it will be given by the Modi government. We have no objection over census. But the Modi government linked the census with NPR," he said.
Owaisi alleged that BJP wants to give citizenship to 13 lakh non-Muslims under the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) whose names were excluded from the NRC list in Assam.