Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Uniform law for asylum-seekers soon

- Rajesh Ahuja

India is not a signatory to the 1951 United Nations Convention on the Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol thereon. There is no law for refugees at present KIREN RIJIJU, Minister of State for home affairs, speaking in March

NEW DELHI: Nearly 70 years after becoming an independen­t nation, India is preparing a uniform national asylum policy, instead of dealing with asylum matters on a case-to-case or nationalit­y-to-nationalit­y basis.

“The idea is to come with a specific law for asylum-seekers under the policy,” said a home ministry official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The objective of the policy is to formally define a refugee, eligibilit­y for asylum, rights, entitlemen­ts and obligation­s and set a time-bound legal framework for naturaliza­tion, said the official.

“A law would also bring global recognitio­n to India for its enduring commitment to refugee protection,” said Roshni Shanker, executive director of Ara Trust that works on refugee laws.

Congress MP Shashi Tharoor had earlier brought a private member’s bill on asylum in the winter session of Parliament last year. His bill sought to create a mechanism for granting asylum that would allow a more effective regulation over entry, exit, and stay of refugees, besides setting out obligation­s, duties, and rights.

“It is crucial that India ends the ad hoc nature of refugee policy,” says Shailesh Rai, senior policy advisor to Amnesty Internatio­nal India.

Rai said it is imperative that India becomes a state party to the UN refugee convention­s and creates a robust domestic legal framework on refugee policy.

The United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees says India has around 2.1 lakh people of ‘concern’ and they include nationals from Afghanista­n (13,381), Myanmar (18,914), Somalia, Tibet (1.1 lakh) and Sri Lankans (64600).

The UNHCR works with refugees who are not from the neighbouri­ng countries.

The exception is Myanmar here. Refugees from neighbouri­ng countries are dealt by the home ministry. India has a sizeable number of people from minority communitie­s from Pakistan, Afghanista­n and Bangladesh who have been given long-term visa and citizenshi­p.

MoS for home Kiren Rijiju told the Parliament in March : “India is not a signatory to the 1951 United Nations Convention on the Status of Refugees and the 1967 Protocol thereon.

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