The Free Press Journal

Enduring ethnic problem of Assam can have solutions

- The writer is a freelance journalist. Views are personal. Ashis Biswas

Even as Assam and parts of the Northeast remain embroiled in vigorous protests against the Citizenshi­p Amendment Bill 2016, one hopeful sign is that new ideas to arrive at a balanced solution have been put forward. The fact that there has been no major outbreak of ethnic violence among dominant groups in the region also fosters optimism during an obviously tense confrontat­ion between the Centre and the non–BJP opposition parties.

Observers point to certain special features in the present situation that differ markedly from the violent 80s and 90s in matters relating to ethnic relations, especially in Assam. People of the three Bengali-speaking districts in the Barak Valley have welcomed the Centre’s decision to allot citizenshi­p for non-Muslim migrants from Bangladesh, Pakistan and other countries. Once more, in terms of political choice, cultural preference­s and language, the clear break that exists between upper Assam districts and the Barak Valley remains as unbridgeab­le as ever.

On the other hand, in Guwahati and some other parts of Assam, where Assamiyas are dominant, groups of Bengalis have joined angry opposition protests against the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), apparently sacrificin­g their own long term political interests. Whether these gestures will successful­ly convince Assamiya organisati­ons of their good faith and loyalty remains open to question.

Sections of both Hindu and Muslim Bengalis settled in Assam have been known to declare falsely Assamiya as their mother tongue during census operations. The motive is to ensure that they were not discrimina­ted against or treated as second class citizens in the state. In the process, the natural domination of Assamiyas in their homeland politicall­y and culturally can be sustained.

Kolkata-based observers feel that in the present situation, an earlier proposal to create a separate state conflating the three Barak Valley districts and adjacent areas could well be revived in the greater interest of preserving peace in the state and the region as a whole. The BJP is not averse by its tradition towards creating small autonomous states, provided certain basic requiremen­ts are fulfilled. The fact that some areas within the valley are already contiguous with Bengali-majority Tripura is, if anything, an added bonus.

However, most Assamiya organisati­ons have refused to support or endorse such proposals in the past for emotional and other reasons. The present area of Assam, according to their spokesmen, is already much reduced for Assamiyas, as Meghalaya became a separate state. Arunachal Pradesh, too, is no longer ruled from Guwahati. In the process, the culture of Assamiyas has lost its earlier pre-1947 domination, its natural hinterland, in the region as a whole.

Not surprising­ly, the idea of a new autonomous state found ready resonance in Cachar, Hailakandi and Karimganj districts, where most people accuse Guwahati-based authoritie­s of neglecting their genuine demands and economic interests. The bitter legacy of the Bengali language movement of the early fifties, when 11 people were shot dead, has not been forgotten. Hardcore Assamiya organisati­ons remain unforgiven in the region.

The other idea doing the rounds has been put forward in a letter jointly signed by 135 academics, activists and profession­als from all over India to President R.N.Kovind. The signatorie­s include Harsh Mander, Johanna Lokhande, Jayati Ghosh, Karen Gabriel, Biswaji Bora, Farah Naqvi, Dhananjay Tripathy, Anuradha Chenoy and Ayesha Kidwai, among others.

They have suggested that the recent upgrading of the citizens’ register in Assam (NRC exercise) has rendered the future of nearly 40 lakh people uncertain for their apparent failure to fulfill the required conditions that ensure Indian citizenshi­p. This, out of a total population of 3.2 crore people. By December 31 2018, the last date for fresh applicatio­ns for such people, it has been seen that only around 31 lakh people have been able to put up more documents and secure additional evidence of their citizenshi­p.

However, even if the NRC authoritie­s accept the claims of all these people, this would still leave around 900,000 people stateless. What is to be done with them? Bangladesh clearly cannot be expected to accept as its citizen such a large number of people. On the other hand, the Supreme Court, the apex authority supervisin­g the upgrading exercise, insists that illegal Bangladesh­is found in Assam should be deported to their land of origin.

Should they be kept in specially administer­ed camps under armed guards in the interim prior to their eventual pushback following Indo-Bangla negotiatio­ns — an extremely unlikely possibilit­y, Supreme Court or not! — as a tribe of unwanted people their fate not unlike that of the hapless Rohingyas of the Rakhine province of Myanmar? It could lead to an imbroglio similar to that involving Myanmar, Bangladesh and the internatio­nal community, drawing India into the vortex of a massive regional ethnic crisis that would be largely of its own creation. Where would so many men, women and children be accommodat­ed in India, who will pay for their upkeep and maintenanc­e, the letter asks.

Unless these questions were actively considered and some concrete plans worked out to the last detail, it would be foolhardy for Indian authoritie­s to proceed with what seems to be an obviously impractica­l, if not harebraine­d, scheme involving the fate of lakhs of people. Security and stability in a highly sensitive region would be once more jeopardise­d with unforeseen long term consequenc­es.

The academics, whose letter has been published in full by a Guwahati-based website, suggest as a way out that everyone enlisted in the NRC exercise be accepted as Indians. That is the best and only way to maintain status quo without unnecessar­ily rocking the boat and engenderin­g fresh ethnic tensions, distrust and mass hatred in a region where the writ of the Centre runs thin on the ground.

The signatorie­s feel that this would be a simple yet permanent solution to what has come to be called ‘the enduring ethnic problem of Assam ‘over the years. If accepted, their proposal can bring about a decisive conclusion to what continues to be called ‘the unfinished business of an Assam settlement,’ once and for all. Political parties and common people can go about their business in peace thereafter.

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