Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

9,000 Assamese seek duplicate admit cards

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

KOLKATA: Those who have applied for duplicate admit cards may have lost the original documents. We are in the process of screening the remaining applicatio­ns on a warfooting.

KALYANMOY GANGULY, WBBSE

Around 9,000 residents of Assam, reportedly excluded from the complete draft of the NRC, have applied to the West Bengal Board of Secondary Education (WBBSE) for issuing duplicate admit cards — of higher secondary examinatio­ns held before 1973 — to them, a senior board official said on Wednesday.

WBBSE president Kalyanmoy Ganguly said the board had issued and despatched admit cards to 6,000 applicants, who actually hailed from Tripura and later migrated to Assam.

They had passed the higher secondary examinatio­n under the West Bengal board before 1973. “We are in the process of screening the remaining applicatio­ns on a warfooting,” Ganguly said.

The applicants were residing in Tripura before 1973. Since there was no secondary school education board in the northeaste­rn state at that time, the schools there were affiliated to the WBBSE, Ganguly added.

The admit card of the board examinatio­n is considered an important document as the date of birth of the candidate is mentioned in it.

Refusing to comment on whether the applicatio­ns for issuance of duplicate admit cards were linked to the exclusion of the names of lakhs of Bengalis from the complete draft of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) in Assam, the WBBSE president said, “Those who have applied for the duplicate admit cards may have lost the original documents.”

The applicatio­ns for the duplicate admit cards were forwarded to the WBBSE by the state education department since July, he said.

The publicatio­n of the complete draft of the NRC in Assam on July 30 had triggered a controvers­y after over 40 lakh names were found to have been excluded from it.

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