Business Standard

The Citizens’ Register does not get to the bottom of things

- NIBIR DEKA

The part draft of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) in Assam was released online at midnight on December 31 in accordance with the Supreme Court’s directive. The next day people flocked to NRC Kendras to check if their names were in the draft. Security forces were deployed at every corner of the state and no untoward situation was reported.

However, a crack has appeared in the ruling alliance on this. The ruling BJP’s ally, the AsomGana Parishad (AGP), is unhappy about the contradict­ions between the NRC and the Citizenshi­p Amendment Bill (2016).

Who is included in the first draft?

The first draft of the NRC has listed 19 million people of the 32.9 million applicants in Assam as legal Indian citizens. The process of verificati­on continues. The authoritie­s will take up verificati­on of the 7.6 million people whose cases were kept in abeyance while the first part draft NRC was being finalised. “We will place our progress before the Supreme Court on the date of the next hearing (February 20), and continue with our work in accordance with its directive,” said state NRC coordinato­r Prateek Hajela.

The issue of missing

names: A total of 13.9 million applicants did not find their names in the draft. There are multiple reports of missing names within the same family due to documentat­ion and data entry error. Hajela has clarified that due to the complicate­d procedure, families may find names of certain members missing and such discrepanc­ies will be addressed.

Some major names have failed to make it to the first draft. Among politician­s, Assam United Democratic Front (AUDF) chief and MP Badaruddin Ajmal, his brother MP Sirajuddin Ajmal, and BJP leader Shiladitya Dev’s name have not featured in the first draft. Ajmal appeared hopeful. Speaking to Protidin Times, he said: “Many VIPs have not been added (to the list). I am expecting my name on the next list.”

Assam Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal has clarified the matter and told PTI: “No one should have any apprehensi­on. If the name of a genuine Indian citizen is missing in the part draft of the NRC, he or she will get a proper chance to incorporat­e it.”

Brief history: Illegal immigratio­n in Assam has been defined using the Assam Accord and the base year of 1971 without any religious categorisa­tion. According to the accord, all those foreigners who had entered Assam between 1951 and 1961 were to be given full citizenshi­p, including the right to vote; those who had done so after 1971 were to be deported; the entrants between 1961 and 1971 were to be denied voting rights for 10 years from the date of detection but would enjoy all other rights of citizenshi­p.

The politics of things: The NRC base year of 1971 is tricky for the BJP in terms of its Bengali Hindu vote bank and also to carry the agenda for the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Bill, 2016. The Bill is being reviewed by a joint parliament­ary committee and is expected to be tabled in Parliament. But there isa mis match between the Citizenshi­p Amendment Bill and the base year of the Ass am accord and this threatens to under mine the N RC.

BJP North East Developmen­t Authority convener and Assam Finance Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma summed up the government position: “We want Bengali-speaking Hindus to remain with the Assamese people. That is the BJP’s viewpoint. It has not changed. It has been the same, both before and after the elections,” said Sarma. When he was asked if it was the BJP’s policy to differenti­ate between Hindu and Muslim migrants from Bangladesh, Sarma said: “Yes. After all, the country was divided in the name of religion. Thus, it is not a new thing.”

This guarantee of safeguardi­ng Hindu Bengali interests was well received in the Barak Valley. Aminul Haque Laskar, the lone minority B JP M LA, told The Sentinel :“Our party’ selection manifesto has clearly sp el tout protection and shelter to all those Hindu Ben gal is who have had to desert their heart hand home under repression and oppression in East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, and forced to take shelter in this country .”

However, the AGP has refuted the claims of the election manifesto promise. AGP leader Utpal Dutta told local TV channels: “They (BJP) did not show us the election manifesto before the elections.” He further accused the BJP of doublespea­k.

Responding to the allegation­s, Sarma said: “We have briefed them during our meetings and answered all their queries”. How the BJP proposes to handle this hot potato remains to be seen.

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