Krishna Pawle, President of the Sassoon Dock Fish Traders Association and Shiv Bharatiya Port Sena, who is spearheading the resistance, lambasted the double standards. “The MbPA labels our hardworking sons of the soil as ‘illegal’ and throws them onto the streets with help of the police force under the Public Premises Act. Meanwhile, BMC never calls their hawkers ‘illegal’, many not even original Mumbaikars, despite endless citizen complaints. They protect them fully. Why? Taxpayers like us contribute directly to the government, making us easy targets. But those deemed illegal by citizens flourish because officials pocket benefits,” Pawle declared, his words fueling a swelling protest movement. Vadhavane echoed the betrayal: “MFDC allotted us the space in 2015, took our rents till 2025, but vanished when MbPA struck. We've been misled and exploited.”