A day after the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill was passed in the parliament, the Goa Congress sought to know what would be the fate of Goans who have opted for a Portuguese passport.
Talking to reporters in Panaji on Thursday, Congress's Goa unit spokesman Trajano D'Mello said Christian ministers in the Pramod Sawant-led state government should also explain their stand on the bill within 48 hours, or else their silence would be interpreted as their support to it.
The passage of the bill in Parliament marked the "darkest day" for the Indian Constitution, he said.
"So many Goans opted for Portuguese passport because the government has failed to provide them employment. The only purpose to get Portuguese passport was to survive," he said, wondering what would be their fate.
Mr D'Mello said the state Congress unit stands with the party leadership in opposing the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill.
"The fallout of the bill can be seen in north-eastern states. Curfew has been imposed in Guwahati. The unrest in north-eastern states indicates that we are heading for a second freedom struggle," he said.
"Web Of Lies": M Kharge Counters PM's '8 Crore Jobs In 4 Years' Remark INDIA Bloc Wins 10 Seats, BJP 2 In Key Polls Across 7 States Himachal Chief Minister's 'Conspiracy Failed' Jibe After Wife's Bypoll Win Trump's Vice President Pick Reveals How His Hindu Wife Helped Him "Someone Must Have Doubted...": Doctor On Trainee IAS Officer's Disability Claim Engineer Stole NEET Question Paper From Exam Body's Trunk, Arrested By CBI Jaro Education Works Closely With Senior Executives From Corporates To Build Future Leaders "He'll Never Come Home": Captain Thapa, Killed In J&K Encounter, Remembered Engineer Stole NEET Question Paper From Exam Body's Trunk, Arrested By CBI Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.