Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Families reunite at NRC centres

- Sadiq Naqvi syed.sadiq@htlive.com

CITIZEN VERIFICATI­ON Proceeding­s carried out to resolve family tree mismatches in Assam help reunite members and expose ‘impostors’ who had forged documents

:Hasan of Azara locality on the outskirts of Guwahati officially establishe­d he is Meer Hasan of Assam and not an illegal immigrant in the state on Sunday.

Standing outside the National Register of Citizens (NRC) verificati­on centre at the circuit house in Guwahati, overlookin­g the Brahmaputr­a, Hasan and his family members breathed a collective sigh of relief.

Moments ago, the process to update citizenshi­p records to weed out illegal immigrants in Assam had accepted his credential­s as an Indian. The family expects a smooth sailing from here on to the NRC list.

At some point, when NRC officials came on a home visit to gather data on their family tree, someone gave his name as only Hasan and not Meer Hasan. Inevitably, a mismatch occurred with the NRC’s legacy data documents.

The legacy documents include the 1951 NRC and electoral rolls up to midnight of March 24, 1971, the cut-off date according to the Assam Accord. According to the accord, all foreigners who came to Assam on or after March 25, 1971, illegally shall be detected and deported from the state.

This mismatch necessitat­ed Hasan to be present at the NRC centre with his two brothers, three sisters, cousins and other relatives. All of them had to be there to prove they knew each other. The sisters, all married, had to travel to Guwahati from different parts of the state.

“Our family will no longer have to run around proving we are Indian citizens,” said Hasan’s cousin Nabiullah.

While one family can breathe easy, the NRC office has its job cut out. It has to verify 4.8 million similar cases of family tree mismatches across the state by May 31, 2018 — the deadline set by the Supreme Court.

As many as 8,350 officials are investigat­ing these mismatches manually in 4,131 venues across the state. They are scanning documents and questionin­g individual­s and their relatives.

Prateek Hajela, state coordinato­r of the NRC, said, “It will take nearly 900,000 hearings to verify all the mismatch cases.”

Collection of family tree data through home visits started after August 31, 2015, after people had submitted verificati­on forms as sought by the NRC, which wants a foolproof data set on citizens that will also check out with legacy documents. Individual­s submitted their forms based on their legacy documents.

Incidental­ly, the verificati­on hearings in front of NRC’s investigat­ing officers have reunited some families and thrown up emotional roller coasters.

For instance, at Sipon in the state’s Sivasagar district, Bina Arandhara, who became Bina Begum after marriage, met her family after 12 years at a verificati­on centre. Her family had not approved of her marrying a Muslim, but there was no rancour when they met to get over the data mismatch together.

In February, NRC officials saw a person apologise to his father for having thrown him out of their house 10 years ago. “The angry father had not declared his son’s name in the family tree, leading to data discrepanc­y,” said an investigat­or who saw them patch up.

Yet, not all family tree mismatches are mistakes, according to NRC investigat­ing officers.

During scrutiny, they are coming across individual­s who have forged documents or bribed others to use their legacy data in a bid to have their names verified for the list.

An investigat­ing officer in

GUWAHATI

Entire families, in many cases spread over different cities and even states, have to come together and appear before an investigat­ing officer.

People are getting notices to report at distant places for verificati­on, and this is tough for the elderly, patients and the poor, according to NGO Citizens Rights Protection Co-Ordination Committee.

Most mismatches occurred because people did not offer complete, or correct, names of kin. This did not match legacy people out of 32.9 million verified as on January 31, 2018 Family tree mismatches encountere­d

Total number of hearings needed

Family tree mismatch hearings completed till March 15

investigat­ion officers

Nagaon spotted several cases in which people declared foreigners or Doubtful Voters (which would keep them out of the NRC list till cases are pending) tried to get through the verificati­on by changing names.

“A woman confessed she hadn’t applied in her name, but a different one because she was on the list of Doubtful Voters,” said the officer, who did not want to be named. documents on the family, according to multiple investigat­ing officers.

The burden of proof is on the applicant.

Investigat­ors are coming across old and illegible documents. There is no clarity on what will happen to those whose names do not make it to NRC lists. Deportatio­n has not been discussed with Bangladesh, and there are several cases where people declared “foreigners” are in detention camps.

Technical hold cases (those born after Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, and in whose case either of their parent’s citizenshi­p is under scrutiny.)

“She had given a gaon (village) panchayat secretary certificat­e to prove her antecedent­s. It looked forged and is being investigat­ed,” the officer added.

Incidental­ly, the NRC office will also have to verify gaon panchayat certificat­es shortly and that will be another extensive exercise. Officials will have to scan 2.9 million of these certificat­es beginning April 2.

 ?? HT ?? Bina Begum (in green) met her family after 12 years at a verificati­on centre.
HT Bina Begum (in green) met her family after 12 years at a verificati­on centre.

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