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‘Why refugees at the cost of Assam?’

- PRAFULLA KUMAR MOHANTA Former Founder-president Asom Gana Parishad

PRAFULLA KUMAR MAHANTA, the former founder-president of the Asom Gana Parishad, was in Delhi to drum up support against a proposed amendment to the Citizenshi­p Act, 1955. He tells Radhika Ramaseshan about the issues confrontin­g Assam.

You were the star of the All Assam Students’ Union (AASU)’s movement for detecting and deporting the so-called foreigners from Assam. After five decades, the exercise is reaching a conclusion of sorts under the leadership of Sarbananda Sonowal, who was your junior colleague in AASU. How do you feel about this?

It’s all right. Sonowal joined a national political party (Bharatiya Janata Party) that is in power in Assam and the Centre. This issue of detecting non-Indians is a common concern of the AGP, BJP and the Centre. His (Sonowal’s) leadership arises from a democratic system, so the two are not inter-related.

The BJP has stolen the limelight from AASU-AGP. Do you feel cheated or dejected?

Let’s be clear. The National Register of Citizens of India (NRC) was prepared under the directions of the Supreme Court. The Court monitored the entire process. Credit should not go or be claimed by any political party. Loud claims must be avoided though it may be tempting for a party in power to do it. You started a protest movement against the proposed amendments to the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Bill, 2016 under the banner of Asom Andolan Sangrami Mancha. What are your objections?

Mainly that the changes envisaged go against the spirit of the Assam Accord (signed in 1985 between late PM Rajiv Gandhi and AASU and other student outfits). The Citizenshi­p Act was amended in 1982 and in its place the Illegal Migrants (Determinat­ion by Tribunals) Act was enacted only for Assam in 1983 (the IMDT Act was intended to insulate the “minorities” from the alleged harassment and victimisat­ion by AASU activists). The Supreme Court struck it down (in 2005). The Citizenshi­p Act was amended again in 1986 (the 1986 amendment inserted Section 6A under which all persons of Indian origin who had entered Assam before January 1, 1966 were deemed to be Indian citizens while those who came after that date but before March 25, 1971 were to get citizenshi­p upon registrati­on, after a 10- year interregnu­m. The rest were to be deported under the IMDT Act ).

The point is these amendments went against the Assam Accord as a result of which indigenous people of Assam suffered immensely. If the Amendment Bill 2006 becomes law, the indigenous people of Assam will become minority and language, literature and culture of Assam will be lost. Assamese people’s struggles and sacrifices will go waste (the proposed amendment confers citizenshi­p on illegal migrants who are Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis and Christians from Afghanista­n, Bangladesh and Pakistan).

Have you discussed the contentiou­s amendment with PM Modi and BJP President Amit Shah?

We have already said what we have to, we staged protests. Sometime back we met the Union home minister. A Joint Parliament­ary Committee has been set up to look into it. The report is expected by December.

The BJP has stuck to the old divide it drew between the refugees and infiltrato­rs from Bangladesh who live in Assam. Who will have to compromise, BJP or AGP? Why refugees at the cost of Assam? If they want to treat people as refugees, why doesn’t the government release them in other states? We are clear. After 1971, whoever came in, whatever be their religion, they must be treated as infiltrato­rs. The question of compromise doesn’t arise. We don’t want this amendment passed.

The NRC authoritie­s have given time to the identified stateless to prove their citizenshi­p. What happens if they can’t? Bangladesh said it won’t take back a single deportee.... That has to be decided by the Centre and not the state government. It’s not as though Bangladesh has never taken back deportees. The government there asks for a permanent address (in Bangladesh) and if a deportee can furnish one, he’s repatriate­d. My government sent back 25 infiltrato­rs.

After the NRC released its list, Arunachal Pradesh turned back the socalled infiltrato­rs who tried to cross over from Assam. Is the North-East sitting on a demographi­c time bomb? Why only Arunachal? Even Nagaland and Mizoram have the right to throw out such people. Yes, we are sitting on a time bomb.

Assam has remained largely peaceful. On its part, what did the AGP do to ensure things didn’t go out of hand?

We told common people that NRC is required to enable genuine Indian citizens to register. People understood. Only Mamata Banerjee is creating trouble. I suggested to her to have an NRC in West Bengal. In 1951 when the first NRC was prepared in Assam, its population was only 80 lakh. Now it’s 3.12 crore. Compared to all-India average, our growth rate is 50 per cent. It’s certainly not for natural reasons.

AGP and BJP are allies, you have ministers in the Sonowal government. Apart from the amendment, do you have other areas of discord?

Alliance is going on but it may not be possible if the amendment gets enacted. This is the only point of disagreeme­nt.

The BJP is milking dry the NRC issue not only in the north-east but other parts too. It’s become a BJP campaign theme...

Everybody will try to do it. Congress is trying. BJP is in power so its campaign will be louder and more forceful.

It could have uneasy ramificati­ons because in Assam, the question of foreigners gets entangled with that of migrants from the other Indian states. Indeed, both are called outsiders. Assamese people are also working and living in other states. If the issue is blown up, won’t it endanger everybody’s livelihood­s?

Migrants are different. They are Indians, they have the right to vote. Here again I must clarify that migrants also must submit legacy data. The problem is a Bengali may genuinely be from West Bengal but if he’s not able to submit legacy data like proof from electoral rolls or land “patta”, it is problemati­c. The “outsider” term is used only for Bangladesh­is, not for Indian migrants.

There’s a perceptibl­e churn among the BJP’s allies. Telugu Desam Party and People’s Democratic Party have left the NDA. Where does the AGP stand?

Let 2019 come, then we will discuss.

AGP was part of non-BJP coalitions that were supported from outside by the Congress, like the United Front. If such a possibilit­y arises after the 2019 elections, do you see the AGP as part of it?

We haven’t discussed but the unity of regional political parties is a must. Only we will not accept Congress’ leadership. We joined hands with the BJP to defeat the Congress. Congress didn’t support the UF government for long. As an ally, BJP is okay.

So it’s decided that you will fight the Lok Sabha polls with the BJP?

As per the High Court order, Assam has to hold panchayat polls in September this year. That we will definitely fight alone. AGP is rising again so the matter of how we should fight the Lok Sabha polls, alone or in alliance, will be discussed by our leaders.

We told common people that NRC is required to enable genuine Indian citizens to register. People understood. Only Mamata Banerjee is creating trouble

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 ??  ?? Prafulla Kumar Mahanta, the former founder-president of the Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), was in Delhi to drum up support against a proposed amendment to the Citizenshi­p Act, 1955 that he believes is unfair to Assam’s “indigenous” people. He spoke to Radhika Ramaseshan about the issues confrontin­g Assam. Edited excerpts:
Prafulla Kumar Mahanta, the former founder-president of the Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), was in Delhi to drum up support against a proposed amendment to the Citizenshi­p Act, 1955 that he believes is unfair to Assam’s “indigenous” people. He spoke to Radhika Ramaseshan about the issues confrontin­g Assam. Edited excerpts:

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