Cape Times

Muslims in citizenshi­p battle

- KRISHNA DAS

NELLIE: Thirty-six years after losing his parents, sister and a fouryear-old daughter in one of India’s worst sectarian massacres, Abdul Suban says he is still trying to prove he’s a citizen of the Hindu-majority nation.

Suban is one of hundreds of thousands of Bengali-speaking Muslims categorise­d as “doubtful voters”, who will not find their names in a National Register of Citizens (NRC) that the north-eastern border state of Assam was due to release today.

“If the government has decided to brand us foreigners, what can we do?” asked the 60-year-old. “NRC is trying to finish us off. Our people have died here, but we will not leave this place.”

Suban was seated with his wife at their house a few hundred metres from a vast paddy field where, in 1983, scores of people were chased down and killed by machete-armed mobs intent on hounding out Muslim immigrants. He survived by running as fast as he could and hiding behind a bush for days.

Work on the citizens’ register has accelerate­d under the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

With an eye on the 2019 national elections, the BJP’s Hindu-first campaign has become more strident, critics say, playing to its core base with divisive programmes such as the citizenshi­p test in Assam, already a tinderbox of ethnic and religious tensions.

Elsewhere in the country’s northern heartland, lynchings of Muslim cattle traders have risen under Modi in a country where many Hindus consider cows sacred, further deepening social divides.

The BJP has denied that the lynchings have any connection with its being in power. Modi has at least twice publicly spoken out against cow vigilantes.

Several other survivors of the “Nellie Massacre”, which killed around 2 000 people from more than a dozen villages, gave accounts of burying bodies in a mass grave now partly under water.

They said they hoped the release of the NCR list today would not spark further violence. Security has been tightened across Assam.

The citizenshi­p test is the culminatio­n of years of often violent agitations by Assamese demanding the removal of outsiders they accuse of taking jobs and resources in the state of 33 million, known for its tea estates and oil fields.

“The NRC is extremely important to make the Assamese people feel protected,” said Santanu Bharali, the legal adviser to the BJP chief minister of Assam.

“It’s a moral victory. The ethnic Assamese always maintained the presence of foreigners, and this will prove that.”

But the opposition Congress Party and rights activists say the government is misusing the register to target even legal Indian Muslim citizens, who have traditiona­lly voted for non-BJP parties. The BJP and NRC authoritie­s have repeatedly denied these allegation­s.

To be recognised as Indian citizens, all residents of Assam had to produce documents proving that they or their families lived in the country before March 24, 1971.

Suban said he and his father were born in Assam, and produced a soiled yellow document that showed his father’s name on the list of voters in Assam in 1965, before the cut-off date.

The border police declined to discuss individual cases, but said not all documents produced by suspected illegal immigrants were valid.

Hundreds of thousands of people fled to India from Bangladesh during its New Delhi-backed war of independen­ce from Pakistan in the early 1970s. Most of them settled in Assam.

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