Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

1.9 million people left off citizenshi­p list in Indian state of Assam

- SHEIKH SAALIQ Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Rishi Lekhi of The Associated Press.

NEW DELHI — Nearly 2 million people from the east Indian state of Assam were excluded Saturday from a final citizenshi­p list that is intended to identify legal residents and weed out migrants, amid fears they could be rendered stateless.

A total of 31.1 million people were included on the list, leaving out 1.9 million, according to a statement from the Assam government. Critics have viewed the exercise as an attempt to deport millions of minority Muslims, many of whom have entered India from neighborin­g Bangladesh.

Assam police appealed to people not to spread rumors for fear of panic after many were accused of being “Bangladesh­i infiltrato­rs” by the Hindu nationalis­t-led government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

The citizens’ list was updated after 68 years, ending four years of work and a 4-decade-old demand seeking detection of migrants.

The list — known as the National Register of Citizens, or NRC — is unique to Assam and was first prepared in 1951. It includes those whose names appeared in the 1951 document and their descendant­s. The list also includes those who had been on India’s electoral rolls up to March 24, 1971, or in any other document approved by the central government.

“The entire process of NRC update has been meticulous­ly carried out in an objective and transparen­t manner,” the registry authoritie­s said in a statement.

Earlier Saturday, people lined up to see if their names were on the list in Buraburi village outside one of the many offices that had been set up across Assam for residents to verify the status of their citizenshi­p applicatio­ns.

Mijanur Rahman, a 47-yearold farmer, found himself, his 21-year-old son, and two of his daughters, aged 16 and 14, included on the list. However, his wife and his three other children — all under the age of 10 — were excluded.

“I am really worried,” said a teary-eyed Rahman.

Retired army officer Mohammad Sanaullah, who grabbed the spotlight after being declared an illegal foreigner and sent to a detention center , was also excluded from the list. Sanaullah, who had won a president’s medal, was declared a foreigner by the Foreigners Tribunal in 2018. He was sent to a detention camp in May before he was granted bail by a high court.

The government said it carried out the exercise to detect and deport undocument­ed migrants from Bangladesh. But the final publicatio­n of the citizenshi­p list has stoked fear of loss of citizenshi­p and long periods of detention.

Those left off the list can appeal to the Foreigner Tribunals within 120 days of Saturday’s announceme­nt. The tribunals must decide on the cases within six months. If an appeal fails, the consequenc­es include punishment in detention centers that are currently being set up by the government.

Amnesty Internatio­nal expressed concerns about the functionin­g of the Foreigners Tribunals. The rights group also urged the Assam government to ensure that “the Foreigners Tribunals function with utmost transparen­cy and are in line with the fair trial standards guaranteed under national and internatio­nal law.”

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