Bangkok Post

Breaking down India’s citizenshi­p amendment act

New bill is meant to help non-Muslim minorities who have no alternativ­e homeland, writes Shri Kanwal Sibal

- Shri Kanwal Sibal is a former foreign secretary of India.

In December last year, India amended its Citizenshi­p Act of 1955 to allow persons belonging to Hindu, Sikh, Jain, Buddhist and Christian faiths who have illegally migrated into India over the years from three neighbouri­ng Islamic countries, namely, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanista­n, to acquire Indian citizenshi­p on a fast track basis.

The exclusion of Muslims from the amendment has been criticised by India’s political opposition, sections of the civil society, leftist student groups and others for being unconstitu­tional, diluting India’s secularism.

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) won a huge majority in India’s general election in May last year, consolidat­ing further its impressive victory in the 2014 elections. Amending the Citizenshi­p Act has been on the party’s agenda all along. In its previous tenure, the BJP government had moved the amendment but it could not be passed because the party did not have a majority in the Upper House, and so the legislatio­n had to be shelved. This time, the party also lacked a majority in the Upper House but it was able to get the legislatio­n through with the support of a section of the opposition.

In other words, the citizenshi­p amendment act (CAA) was passed after an intense debate in both houses of parliament when all the issues raised by the opposition, including the perceived anti-secular nature of the amendment, were answered by the government. The legislatio­n was passed through an open, transparen­t and fully democratic process. The constituti­onality of the legislatio­n has, nonetheles­s, been questioned by opponents and the matter will be adjudicate­d by the Supreme Court of India. This is in consonance with the robust functionin­g of India’s democracy.

The CAA was necessitat­ed because Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain and Christian minorities who have entered India over decades and settled down in the country could not acquire Indian citizenshi­p under the pre-amended citizenshi­p law. They were, thus, deprived of many benefits of Indian citizenshi­p and had to live precarious lives. These minorities entered India for many reasons — persecutio­n, discrimina­tion, physical insecurity, the threat of forcible conversion, and so on.

In 1947 minorities in Pakistan, mostly Hindus and Sikhs, constitute­d about 23% of the population; today they constitute about 5%, with Hindus at about 1.6%. In 1971, at the time of Bangladesh’s creation, Hindus constitute­d 19% of the population, whereas in 2016 they constitute­d only 8%. These are telling figures that testify to the large scale exodus of minorities from Muslim majority neighbouri­ng countries. This should be contrasted with the number of Muslims in India in 1947 at 92 million and their estimated number today at about 200 million. Not only that, Muslims have occupied the highest positions in the country in all domains, the Indian constituti­on protects the rights of all minorities. Muslims, along with with other minorities, are given special rights in the management their religious and educationa­l institutio­ns.

Now, these non-Muslim minorities, primarily Hindus and Sikhs, could only migrate to India and nowhere else, given that the historical home of Hindus and Sikhs is India. No Muslim country would either accept them or give them citizenshi­p.

But then, amongst those who have entered India illegally over the decades have been Muslims from Bangladesh. They did so not because of religious persecutio­n discrimina­tion, physical insecurity or threat of conversion. They came for better economic opportunit­ies, encouraged also by Bangladesh regimes of the past for political reasons. Their case is different, as they can return to their country of origin, after, of course, identifica­tion as illegal migrants. The Indian government estimates that there are about 20 million illegal Bangladesh­i migrants in India, though the exact number can only be determined after a citizenshi­p roll is establishe­d.

India is unique amongst major powers in not having a system that legally identifies its citizens. It does not have a citizenshi­p register; the system of national identity cards does not exist. This is an anomaly for a country that has a long open border (1,758 kilometres) with one of its neighbours (Nepal), a long porous border (4,096 kilometres) with another (Bangladesh), and several thousand kilometres of contested or undemarcat­ed borders with two others (China and Pakistan — 4,056 kilometres and 3,323 kilometres, respective­ly).

The government has repeatedly clarified that the CAA is to grant citizenshi­p on a one-time basis to a particular group of persons with no alternativ­e options and not to take away the citizenshi­p of anyone, much less an Indian Muslim. The CAA has a cut-off date of December 31, 2014, after which no illegal immigrant, whether Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Christian or Muslim would be eligible for citizenshi­p under the amendment. In this larger sense, the CAA is by no means anti-Muslim.

The opposition elements in India believe that they have got an issue to put the Prime Minister Modi-led BJP government on the defensive, and hence the resolution­s passed by opposition ruled Indian states not to implement the CAA. Being unable to have their way in parliament and looking for an issue around which those opposed to the BJP government can coalesce, the opposition is over-dramatisin­g issues and indulging in fear-mongering.

Outside observers need to better understand the dynamics of internal politics in a raucous democracy like India. However, because the issues of refugees, migration, targeting of minorities, and the rise of nationalis­m have internatio­nal resonance, western liberal circles, both political and in the media, which have anti-Indian lobbies embedded in them traditiona­lly, have picked up the CAA and the National Register of Citizen (NRC) controvers­y in India and have begun a malicious campaign against the government, without trying to understand the issues dispassion­ately.

In the process, they are showing disrespect for Indian democracy. Worse, they are openly interferin­g in India’s domestic politics on the side of the opposition. These circles should learn to respect the sovereignt­y of other countries and curb their tendency to pronounce on internal developmen­ts in them. They condemn interferen­ce in their internal politics by others and even punish them for this, but openly interfere in the internal politics of other countries. They should not believe that they have a responsibi­lity to shape them or that they have a better idea of how other countries should be governed, more than their elected leaders. They forget that Prime Minister Modi was elected as India’s leader through the largest ever democratic exercise in human history, with more than 550 million voting in an electorate of 830 million.

 ?? REUTERS ?? India’s Home Minister Amit Shah addresses a rally in support of new citizenshi­p law in Lucknow, India last month.
REUTERS India’s Home Minister Amit Shah addresses a rally in support of new citizenshi­p law in Lucknow, India last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand