Millennium Post

‘Won’t implement CAA if even one Jharkhandi is uprooted due to it’

Will go through the details of the citizenshi­p law: Jharkhand Cm-designate Hemant Soren

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NEW DELHI: Jharkhand chief minister-designate Hemant Soren on Tuesday said he will go through the details of the citizenshi­p law and if even one person from his state is uprooted due to the amended

legislatio­n, then it will not be implemente­d.

Soren, who led the Jharkhand Mukti MorchaCong­ress-rjd alliance to a win in the assembly polls, also said that he had not gone through the details of the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA) and the possible NRC and he would make a "holistic review" of them.

"I have not gone through the NRC and CAB (now CAA) documents that the government of India wants to implement. Citizens are on the roads against these laws. We will go through it and if it uproots even one Jharkhandi from his or her home, then it won't be implemente­d," 44-year-old Soren said in an interview.

He was on Tuesday formally elected the JMM legis

lature party leader and will be sworn in on December 29 at 1 pm.

"The NPR has been done today. We will do a holistic review of the entire act and the policy at the state level and I need to be convinced that not a single Jharkhandi is uprooted from his or her home due to this law," the JMM working president said when asked about his take on the CAA and NRC with many states ruled by Opposition parties asserting

that they will not implement the controvers­ial citizenshi­p law.

His remarks came hours after the Union Cabinet approved over Rs 3,941.35 crore for updating the National Population Register.

According to the CAA, members of Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi and Christian communitie­s who have come

from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanista­n till December 31, 2014 and facing religious persecutio­n will be granted Indian citizenshi­p after staying in the country for five years.

Protests against the CAA demanding revoking of the law have rocked the country, including in West Bengal, in the past few days.

Asked about his alliance's victory in the Jharkhand polls, Soren said it was a win for democracy and against the "divisive policies" that the BJP had implemente­d in the state.

Results have shown that

local issues in states are top most priority of people and their aspiration­s should be addressed, he said, adding that elections are fought on ideologies.

Asked about his priorities as chief minister, Soren said he would focus on land rights act to give land to the landless.

Delinking Aadhar with Public Distributi­on System and rationalis­ing the distributi­on of PDS would also be a priority, he said. He also listed tack

ling unemployme­nt, creating an employment roadmap for the state, providing water for irrigation and potable drinking water to every household, being on top of his government's agenda.

Creating a holistic plan for reviving and boosting public health and education infrastruc­ture is also very important, he said.

Welfare of tribals, backwards and minorities will be high on the new government's agenda, he said.

 ??  ?? JMM working President Hemant Soren arrives for a party MLAS meeting in Ranchi, Jharkhand, on Tuesday
JMM working President Hemant Soren arrives for a party MLAS meeting in Ranchi, Jharkhand, on Tuesday

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