Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Are India's emergency visas for Afghans issued based on religion?

India's past citizenshi­p policy, which critics say excludes Muslims, has raised questions as to who is eligible for special new humanitari­an visas for Afghan refugees fleeing the Taliban.

-

Days after the Taliban seized control of Afghanista­n, the Indian government introduced a new category of visa to fasttrack the applicatio­ns of Afghans who want to come to India and flee what has become a growing humanitari­an crisis.

It was announced that all Afghans, irrespecti­ve of their religion, could apply for the socalled e-Emergency X-Misc Visa online.

However, the announceme­nt of the fast-tracked visas kicked up controvers­y in India over whether there would indeed be religious discrimina­tion in determinin­g eligibilit­y.

The controvers­y is partly based on a law enacted in 2019 called the Citizenshi­p Amend

ment Act (CAA), which fast-tracks citizenshi­p of Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi and Christian immigrants from Afghanista­n, Pakistan and Bangladesh who arrived in India before 2015.

However, it excludes Muslims, a move that has been denounced for underminin­g India's secular constituti­on.

Do Hindus have priority for the humanitari­an visas?

Recent statements by members of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya

Janata Party (BJP) government have only exacerbate­d concerns.

"Recent developmen­ts in our volatile neighborho­od and the way Sikhs and Hindus are going through a harrowing time are precisely why it was necessary to enact the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA)," Minister Hardeep Singh Puri tweeted on Sunday.

Modi has also directed officials to extend all possible help to "Afghan brothers and sisters" looking for assistance from India, particular­ly Sikh and Hindu minorities who are seeking refuge.

"Why does the Modi government get religion into everything? Religion has nothing to do with this," Mahbouba Seraj, a civil rights activist in Afghanista­n told the news website India Today.

"It is unfortunat­e that in a humanitari­an crisis, the government is choosing to prioritize who will be given visas. This political messaging is being played out for ulterior reasons," Kavita Krishnan, Secretary of the All India Progressiv­e Women's Associatio­n, told DW.

India's evacuation mission from Afghanista­n

Early last week, India completed the evacuation of some 170 diplomats and other staff members from Afghanista­n, and since then, there have been special flights evacuating Indians and Afghan Sikhs and Hindus.

However, an official statement on who will be issued visas has left unanswered questions on the visa eligibilit­y for other Afghans.

In response to media queries regarding the situation in Afghanista­n, foreign office spokespers­on Arindam Bagchi said last week: "We are in constant touch with the representa­tives of Afghan Sikh and Hindu communitie­s. We will facilitate repatriati­on to India of those who wish to leave Afghanista­n."

An immigratio­n official told DW that visas will be granted after necessary security checks are conducted, which include travel history and criminal records.

"Initially, it will be a period for six months and can be later extended depending upon the requiremen­ts and the situation back in Afghanista­n. There is a provision for travelers to apply for an extension," a senior official told DW under condition of anonymity.

Since India reopened its Kabul embassy in 2001, thousands of Afghans have worked in various capacities, and risked their lives, to protect Indian interests in Afghanista­n.

"Obviously, there should be no prioritiza­tion in face of such colossal humanitari­an crisis," Shanthie Mariet D'Souza, a foreign policy expert at the Kautilya School of Public Policy in Hyderabad, told DW.

"Many of them are desperatel­y waiting to be evacuated to India. India needs to move beyond such prioritiza­tion and categoriza­tion if it intends to maintain goodwill, not only among Afghans, but also in the region," D’Souza added.

India's Afghan refugee

population

India has traditiona­lly hosted refugees from Afghanista­n since 1979, even though it is not a signatory to the 1951 United Nations refugee convention.

According to the UN High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR), in 2019 there were approximat­ely 40,000 refugees and asylum-seekers registered in India.

Afghans are the second-largest community in India, comprising 27%. A large Afghan refugee population lives in different neighborho­ods in New Delhi and many run restaurant­s, bakeries and confection­ery shops.

 ??  ?? Hoards of people are trying to evacuate Afghanista­n from Kabul airport
Hoards of people are trying to evacuate Afghanista­n from Kabul airport
 ??  ?? A family of Sikh refugees from Afghanista­n who fled to New Delhi in 2020
A family of Sikh refugees from Afghanista­n who fled to New Delhi in 2020

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany