Deccan Chronicle

NRC coordinato­r moves SC for comprehens­ive reverifica­tion

So far, verificati­on has helped in the detection of only forged documents

- MANOJ ANAND | DC

Assam state NRC coordinato­r Hitesh Dev Sarma has moved the Supreme Court seeking a comprehens­ive reverifica­tion of the draft National Register of Citizens as well as its supplement­ary list.

Following the decision of the outgoing and present BJP government, the NRC coordinato­r in the petition pleaded for an appropriat­e direction from the court on the process to be undertaken under Clause 4 (3) of the Schedule of the Citizenshi­p (Registrati­on of Citizens and Issue of National Identity Cards) Rules 2003. Mr Sarma sought reverifica­tion under the supervisio­n of a monitoring committee, preferably represente­d by the respective district judge, district magistrate and superinten­dent of police.

“Major irregulari­ties have been detected in the lists of the NRC in Assam and a comprehens­ive reverifica­tion should be conducted. Irregulari­ties have been detected in the final draft as well as the supplement­ary list. While ineligible names were included, many eligible names have also been excluded,” he said in his petition.

So far, the verificati­on process has helped in the detection of only forged documents, he said, and not any manipulati­on or manufactur­ed secondary document used to procure the main document.

For example, a name in the electoral roll may be verified through back-end verificati­on, the petition argued. But office verificati­on cannot detect whether it was entered fraudulent­ly with the help of forged or manipulate­d documents.

“This is because there had been no back-end verificati­on in the preparatio­n of electoral rolls,” the petition read.

“The office verificati­on process could however be still a very effective tool for verificati­on if it was properly and effectivel­y combined with the Family Tree Verificati­on process," it added.

The NRC coordinato­r also pleaded that in the “Original Inhabitant­s” category and the “Persons from other States” category, several errors had been detected. Mr Sarma, in his plea before the court, argued that the preparatio­n of a correct and errorfree NRC was integral to national security too.

It is significan­t that Assam chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma, at his first press conference after taking office, made it clear his government would seek NRC re-verificati­on. “Our view on NRC is very clear. We want 20 per cent re-verificati­on of the list in districts bordering Bangladesh and 10 per cent re-verificati­on in other districts. If after that, the NRC is found to be correct, the state government would accept it and take the process forward. But if the NRC is found faulty even after the re-verificati­on, we want the Supreme Court to view this issue critically,” the chief minister told reporters at his first press briefing.

“If the NRC data is found correct, then we shall do nothing, but if there are discrepanc­ies we will ask for the Supreme Court’s guidance. We have been saying this for a while and we stand by this,” he added.

“CAA is a law that was passed by the Parliament and, as it stands, the state government has nothing much to do in this regard, as the rules are yet to be framed. Since, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the exercise to frame the rules is on hold, that is where the matter lies,” the CM added.

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