Updated On: 14 February, 2020 07:10 AM IST | Mumbai | Arita Sarkar
A group of women protesters from Mumbai Bagh met Home Minister Anil Deshmukh and NCP MP Supriya Sule over police harassment, and sought the resolution in the Vidhan Sabha

The BMC has begun work on Morland Road where women and students protesting against the CAA will continue with the agitation despite it. Pic/Bipin Kokate
TWO days after members of the Mumbai Bagh Coordination Committee met police commissioner Sanjay Barve, a group of women protesters approached Supriya Sule, Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) member of parliament, and Home Minister Anil Deshmukh on Thursday to voice their grievances about being harassed by the police. While Deshmukh had earlier given assurances that no one in Maharashtra would be affected by CAA-NRC-NPR, the protesters demanded that a resolution against the Citizenship (Amendment) Act be passed in the Vidhan Sabha, to make it official.
Varsha Vidya Vilas, a social activist from the Bharat Bachao Andolan, accompanied the congregation of 15 women who met Sule and Deshmukh. "We shared our concerns about the police who have been issuing multiple Section 149 notices to the same person and visiting people's homes to deliver the notices. If the government is serious about not implementing CAA in the state, they should pass a resolution in the Vidhan Sabha like other states," said Vilas.