Millennium Post

Names of all ‘genuine Indians’ to be included in NRC: Assam CM

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

GUWAHATI: With Assam on the edge ahead of the publicatio­n of the final draft of the National Register of Citizens (NRC), Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal on Thursday said names of all “genuine Indians” will be incorporat­ed in the list of the state’s citizens.

Sonowal also ruled out any possibilit­y of violence after the publicatio­n of the NRC saying adequate forces were deployed across the state to deal with any situation.

“Names of all genuine Indian citizens will be included in the final draft. There should be no apprehensi­on over it,” he said.

The chief minister said the state government has provided all assistance to the NRC authoritie­s and people too have been extending full cooperatio­n to the entire exercise, which is being undertaken under the direct supervisio­n of the Supreme Court.

“The central government has provided additional forces following our requests. Both the central and the state government­s are working as a team. We hope that the people will cooperate with us like they did in the past,” he said.

Meanwhile, NRC state coordinato­r Prateek Hajela said the final draft of the NRC in Assam will not be released on June 30, as scheduled, due to floods in Barak Valley.

The current wave of floods in the state has affected more than five lakh people in seven districts. As many as 25 people have also lost their lives in the floods.

The part draft of the NRC, a list of the state’s citizens, was published on the intervenin­g night of December 31 and January 1 where names of 1.9 crore people out of the 3.29 crore applicants were incorporat­ed.

The massive exercise aimed at identifyin­g illegal immigrants in the state that borders Bangladesh is being carried out in Assam following a decision in 2005 after a series of meetings between the central and state government­s and the influentia­l All Assam Students’ Union (AASU).

Assam, which faced influx of people from Bangladesh since the early 20th century, is the only state having an NRC, first prepared in 1951.

The current exercise, started in 2005 under the then Congress regime, got a major push only after the BJP came to power in the state with illegal immigratio­n from Bangladesh as a poll plank.

The Supreme Court, which is monitoring the entire process, had ordered that the first draft of the NRC be published by December 31 after completing the scrutiny of over two crore claims along with that of around 38 lakh people whose documents were suspect.

Of the 3.29 crore applicatio­ns submitted, there was confusion over the inclusion of 29 lakh people who had submitted certificat­es issued by ‘gram panchayats’ as proof of identity, after a Gauhati High Court order in February had deemed ‘panchayat’ certificat­es invalid, another official said.

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