Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Challenge the NDA’s citizenshi­p bill

It represents the first instance of a communal basis explicitly being coded into the law

- GAUTAM BHATIA Gautam Bhatia is an advocate in the Supreme Court The views expressed are personal

THE FRAMERS OF THE INDIAN CONSTITUTI­ON OPTED FOR CITIZENSHI­P BASED ON A PHYSICAL CONNECTION BECAUSE THEY FELT ETHNICITY-BASED CITIZENSHI­P WAS A RECIPE FOR COMMUNAL DIVISION

The last few days have seen protests break out in the Northeaste­rn states in response to the Lok Sabha’s decision to pass the Citizenshi­p Amendment Bill of 2016. While the protests are centred on the fear that the bill will enable a dilution of local and indigenous identity by accelerati­ng demographi­c changes, there are other, constituti­onal reasons to oppose it, and urge the Rajya Sabha to reject it.

The Citizenshi­p Amendment Bill provides that “persons belonging to minority communitie­s, namely, Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis and Christians from Afghanista­n, Bangladesh and Pakistan”, shall not be considered illegal migrants. It also provides an accelerate­d path to citizenshi­p, lowering the residence requiremen­t from 11 years to six years.

The government has publicly defended the bill by arguing that it provides a sanctuary for religious minorities facing persecutio­n in their homelands. While that is a laudable goal, the text of the bill adopts an unconstitu- tional method to achieve it: it singles out religion as the basis for distinguis­hing between people who are treated as illegal migrants, and those who are not. This goes against our constituti­onal ethos: during the time of the framing of the Constituti­on, there was a strong debate about which concept of citizenshi­p the new Indian State would commit to: citizenshi­p based on a physical connection with the territory of the State, or citizenshi­p based on ethnicity or other communal markers.

After deliberati­on, the constituti­onal framers adopted the first approach, noting that this was the direction that all progressiv­e nations were taking — and that ethnicity-based citizenshi­p was a relic of the past, and a recipe for communal division. While there have been departures from this principle during the last 70 years, the citizenshi­p bill represents the first instance of a communal basis explicitly being coded into the law. Under the bill, the question of whether an individual from Afghanista­n, Bangladesh or Pakistan is an illegal migrant or not, will be determined by virtue of her religion — i.e., whether she is a Muslim or not.

Even if we were to take the government’s claims at face value — that the purpose of the bill is to offer sanctuary to religious minorities — it fails on its own terms. In recent times, the religious minority that has been subjected to the most vivid and stark persecutio­n — bordering on genocide — has been the Rohingya Muslim community of Myanmar. In the Supreme Court, however, the government explicitly disclaimed responsibi­lity for Rohingya Muslims who were present in India, and — after sanction from the court — deported some of them. While, as a matter of law, the State has the power to police its borders as it sees fit (subject to principles of internatio­nal law), what it cannot do is discrimina­te in how it carries out that policing, and, in particular, whom it treats as an illegal migrant, and whom it doesn’t.

Perhaps recognisin­g the illogicali­ty of this position, the Citizenshi­p Amendment Bill makes no mention of protecting religious minorities from persecutio­n; rather, the Statement of Objects and Reasons stipulates that “many persons of Indian origin including persons belonging to the aforesaid minority communitie­s from the aforesaid countries have been applying for citizenshi­p ... but are unable to produce proof of their Indian origin ... this denies them many opportunit­ies and advantages that may accrue only to the citizens of India, even though they are likely to stay in India permanentl­y”.

This, however, is even more insidious, because it explicitly suggests that the bill is concerned only with the travails of the nonMuslim persons “of Indian origin” who may want to settle in India permanentl­y. There is no warrant for making a distinctio­n between “persons of Indian origin ... likely to stay in India permanentl­y”, on religious lines. Rather, it reveals even more starkly the communal slant of the bill, and why it is imperative that it is challenged, both in the Rajya Sabha, and — if it passes — in the Supreme Court.

 ?? PTI ?? Students protest against the citizenshi­p bill, Guwahati, January 11
PTI Students protest against the citizenshi­p bill, Guwahati, January 11
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