Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Assured NRC India’s internal matter: B’desh foreign secy

Says will keep a close eye on developmen­ts, was concerned over deportatio­n statements

- Rezaul H Laskar rezaul.laskar@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI : Dhaka takes comfort from assurances by New Delhi that the implementa­tion of t he National Register of Citizens (NRC) in Assam is an internal matter but will keep a close eye on developmen­ts, Bangladesh foreign secretary Shahidul Haque said on Saturday.

The NRC issue was raised by the Bangladesh­i side during the meeting here between visiting Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and her Indian counterpar­t Narendra Modi, and it also figured briefly during their talks on the margins of the UN General Assembly in New York last month.

“Prime Minister Modi has explained to Prime Minister Hasina the process that India has put up, in terms of making sure that everybody is eventually included in this, and we were told that this is an internal matter of India,” Haque told a news briefing.

“Our relationsh­ip is currently the best of the best, and the relationsh­ip is extremely warm and friendly but at the same time, we are keeping our eyes quite open...,” he said, adding Bangladesh wasn’t currently worried about the issue.

Ever since some 1.9 million people were left out of the final version of the NRC in Assam in August, Bangladesh has been concerned by statements by some BJP leaders that these people would be deported.

The Bangladesh­i side has pointed to the divergence between assurances given by Modi and external affairs minister S Jaishankar, and public remarks by home minister Amit Shah, who has said every infiltrato­r will be driven out.

People familiar with discussion­s at Saturday’s meeting said the Bangladesh­i side raised the NRC issue and sought an update on the process. The Indian side pointed out it was an “ongoing process” mandated and directed by the Supreme Court, and whose final outcome was awaited, the people said.

“They asked us what is happening and what is going to happen. We said we have to see where the process leads to,” said a person who declined to be identified.

Both sides appeared keen to play down the matter, with the people cited above saying the Indian and Bangladesh­i delegation­s discussed the NRC issue and moved on.

Haque said: “I think we shouldn’t make a crisis out of nothing at this stage, and we should be able to wait and see.”

The Bangladesh­i foreign secretary, who has served with the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM), said the movement of people is a global issue and cited the example of Mexico and the US while pointing out there have “always been issues regarding mobility between neighbouri­ng states”.

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