Gulf Today

In India’s citizenshi­p test, spelling error can ruin a family

The draft list of citizens excluded a total of about 4 million people

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DHUBRI: Riyazul Islam says he had to produce family documents going back to 1951 to prove he was an Indian and not an illegal Bangladesh­i immigrant. But a draft list of citizens released in July excluded him and his mother, among a total of about 4 million people left off.

A wiry 33-year-old living in the northeaste­rn state of Assam, Islam says he and his mother have no further documents left to prove they are Indians, although his father and many others in his family have been included in the National Register of Citizens (NRC).

“If my father is an Indian citizen how come I am not?” said Islam in an interview in the small Assam town of Dhubri, close to the border with Muslimmajo­rity Bangladesh. “What more proof do they need?” Anguish like this is now commonplac­e in Assam, where the Hindu nationalis­t government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi accelerate­d work on the citizen’s list after coming to power in the state two years ago, promising to act against immigrants accused of stealing jobs and resources from locals.

The government has not given details of the four million excluded from the list. But most are believed to be minority Bengali-speaking Muslims living in the state, which has a total population of 33 million, mostly Assamese-speaking Hindus. Many of those excluded are illiterate and poor, and some are victims of a spelling error in their names or a mistake in their age in documents offered for proof of citizenshi­p, according to a review of their documents by Reuters.

Opposition parties say Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is denying citizenshi­p to Muslims through the Assam list, and demonstrat­ing its Hindu nationalis­t credential­s with an eye on a general election due by May.

The BJP’S Assam spokesman, Bijan Mahajan said there was no religion-based motive behind the citizenshi­p drive.

“(This is) being opposed for political mileage whereas at ground zero there is absolutely no tension,” he said.

However, Arun Jaitley, one of Modi’s senior-most cabinet colleagues, said in a Facebook post this month that the NRC was necessary because the growth in the Hindu population of Assam had been overtaken by that of Muslims.

Ethnic Assamese have been agitating against outsiders in the state for decades. In 1983, about 2,000 people were chased down and killed by machetearm­ed mobs intent on hounding out Muslim immigrants. It has not been clearly establishe­d which group was behind the carnage.

 ?? Reuters ?? Razia Bibi and her daughter-in-law Sajida Begum, whose names are excluded from the draft list of the National Register of Citizens, pose for a picture.
Reuters Razia Bibi and her daughter-in-law Sajida Begum, whose names are excluded from the draft list of the National Register of Citizens, pose for a picture.

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