Mumbai, Aug 29 (IANS) Mumbai Police on Friday extended permission by a day to pro-Maratha quota activist Manoj Jarange-Patil to hold the agitation at Azad Maidan.
The police had granted permission for a day on Friday between 10 am and 6 pm by laying several conditions. However, Jarange-Patil, who reached Mumbai with a large number of supporters, said police permission for a day is not acceptable.
Jarange-Patil, during the day, made an application seeking more time for his protest.
Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis said that the Mumbai police have granted him permission for a day.
“However, he has sought permission again. The police will follow the directions of the High Court within the framework of the law. This is a question between the protesters and the administration,” claimed the Chief Minister.
Earlier, Jarange-Patil claimed that he would die but would not back down, adding that he would not leave Mumbai until his demands are met by the state government.
Police sources said that a larger number of Maratha community members were present at Azad Maidan and outside against the conditions laid down in the permission.
“Despite assurances that there would be no traffic jam, vehicles were parked on the road, which caused traffic jams. At some places, protesters were deliberately blocking vehicles,” they said.
They added that the protesters who came to Azad Maidan for Jarange-Patil's agitation are now heading towards Vashi.
They said that arrangements have been made for the protesters to stay there.
However, the Eastern Freeway is now open, and there is no traffic jam.
--IANS
sj/dan
You may also like
MasterChef viewers disgusted as they issue major complaint over scene on BBC show
Floods hit NH-21: NHAI launches urgent restoration action plan for Kiratpur-Manali Highway
Dharmasthala case: Dharmadhikari Veerendra Heggade appeals for peace among devotees
Rahul Gandhi should extend unconditional apology: Pralhad Joshi on 'abuse' against PM Modi
Surgery Count Dips At AIIMS Bhopal; Shortage Of OT Consumables Leads To 55,000 Drop In Operations In One Year