FrontLine

CONTROVERS­Y

- BY SUSHANTA TALUKDAR

Assam on the boil over changes to Citizenshi­p Bill

As Assam erupts in protests over the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Bill, 2016, the ruling BJP and the Sonowal government are seen to be using the smokescree­n of the process of updating the NRC in a bid to camouflage their actual position on the Bill.

EVER since the signing of the Assam Accord in 1985, the expulsion of all “illegal Bangladesh­i migrants”, irrespecti­ve of religion, has been the consensus demand in Assam. The Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Bill, 2016, introduced by the Narendra Modi government in Parliament sparked off a controvers­y that refuses to die in Assam and other north-eastern States as it proposes to make nonmuslim “illegal migrants” from Bangladesh eligible to apply for Indian citizenshi­p.

The Bill’s Statement and Objects of Reason states that “under the existing provisions of the Citizenshi­p Act, 1955, persons belonging to these six minority communitie­s, from Afghanista­n, Bangladesh and Pakistan, who have either entered into India without valid travel documents or the validity of their documents have expired are regarded as illegal migrants and hence ineligible to apply for Indian citizenshi­p and it is proposed to make them eligible for applying for Indian citizenshi­p”. Secondly, the Bill also proposes to reduce the period of residency in India required under the Act for eligibilit­y to apply for citizenshi­p to six years from the current period of 11 years.

The Bill, however, excludes Muslims and Jews.

Those opposing the Bill have been insisting that determinat­ion of citizenshi­p on the basis of religion is unacceptab­le as secularism is a part of the basic structure of the Indian Constituti­on. They argue that Article 14 of the Constituti­on guarantees equality before law and prohibits discrimina­tion on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth and that the Bill is violative of this Article.

A Joint Parliament­ary Committee (JPC) headed by Rajendra Agrawal is currently examining the Bill in order to submit a report to Parliament. The committee visited Assam and Meghalaya from May 7 to 11 for public hearings on the Bill.

The Bill has triggered sharp opposition in the north-eastern States. In Assam, it has snowballed into

mass protests, reviving memories of the six-year-long anti-foreigner agitation spearheade­d and launched by the All Assam Students’ Union (AASU) and the erstwhile All Assam Gana Sangram Parishad (AAGSP) in the late 1970s, which culminated in the signing of the Assam Accord.

The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has found itself isolated in the Brahmaputr­a valley over the issue, with opposition forces ranging from the Congress, the All India United Democratic Front (AIUDF) and the Left parties to student and youth bodies, including AASU, organisati­ons of various ethnic communitie­s, literary bodies, and women’s groups and intellectu­als, writers, singers and artistes taking to the streets and giving representa­tions to the JPC demanding the withdrawal of the controvers­ial Bill. They have been demanding that all post-1971 “illegal Bangladesh­i migrants” must be identified and expelled in accordance with the Assam Accord.

The Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), a constituen­t of the Bjp-led coalition government headed by Sarbananda Sonowal, has also opposed the Bill as “it violates the Assam Accord”, and the party is opposed to determinat­ion of citizenshi­p on the basis of religion. It has threatened to snap ties with the BJP and quit the government if the Central government pushes for its enactment. In the Barak valley, however, most organisati­ons have supported the Bill and submitted representa­tions to the JPC seeking its enactment.

OPPOSITION FROM WITHIN BJP

The State government­s in Meghalaya and Mizoram have adopted Cabinet decisions opposing the Bill. The Nagaland Cabinet has also decided to oppose the Bill if “it goes against the interest of the Nagas”. The BJP is a partner in the ruling coalition in Meghalaya and Nagaland. In Mizoram, currently ruled by the Congress, the BJP State unit has opposed the Bill. The stand taken by the BJP units in Meghalaya, Nagaland and Mizoram has emboldened the protesters in Assam to mount pressure on the Sonowal Cabinet to adopt a resolution demanding the withdrawal of the Bill.

Under growing pressure, the coalition government led by Sonowal announced that it would clarify its stand after the final draft of the updated National Register of Citizens (NRC) was published. The BJP’S Assam State unit also adopted the same position. However, senior BJP leaders and several senior Ministers in the Sonowal Cabinet, the Rashtriya Swayamsewa­k Sangh (RSS) and other leaders of the Sangh Parivars insist that Hindu Bangladesh­is do not pose any threat to the existence and identity of Assamese people, whereas Muslim Bangladesh­i migrants have altered the demography and pose a grave threat to the existence and identity of the Assamese and other ethnic communitie­s. The Supreme Court had fixed June 30 for the publicatio­n of the final draft, but the prevailing flood situation has affected work in some districts.

NATIONAL REGISTER

An effective mechanism for identifyin­g and expelling illegal Bangladesh­i migrants was elusive until political consensus was reached that the National Register of Citizens, 1951, in Assam would be updated with the cut-off date of March 24, 1971, in accordance with the Assam Accord.

The National Register of Citizens, 1951, is being updated in accordance with the provision of The Citizenshi­p Act, 1955, and the Citizenshi­p (Registrati­on of Citizens and Issue of National Identity Card), Rules, 2003, with the cut-off date of March 24, 1971. The first draft, published on December 31, 2017, included the names of 1.9 crore of the total 3.29 crore applicants. Assam is the only State in the country to get its NRC.

Parties and organisati­ons opposing the Bill insist that Assam had taken the burden of a large number of “foreigners” from erstwhile East Pakistan and also agreed to accept all such foreigners who had come in until March 24, 1971, as Indian citizens and therefore the State cannot take the burden of any more foreigners after this cut-off date. Apprehensi­on over “illegal Bangladesh­i migrants” outnumberi­ng the Assamese and other ethnic language speakers and posing a grave threat to their linguistic and cultural identities stems from the migration of people who speak Bengali dialects from erstwhile East Pakistan following the 1947 Partition, during the Bangladesh Liberation War and, through a porous border, after the creation of Bangladesh. Efforts by the BJP, the RSS and other Sangh Parivar organisati­ons to push the Citizenshi­p Bill are being seen as attempts to valorise religious identity over linguistic identity. There are official records and correspond­ene showing the number of migrants who came to Assam after Partition.

“Total number of migrants from erstwhile East Pakistan to Assam in 1961 was 2,20,691, as determined by Registrar General of India. Till May 31, 1966, 2,15,794 migrants were detected, and notices of deportatio­n were served, or prosecutio­n were served on 2,15,535. Out of these according to figures confirmed by check posts, 1,43,438 have already left the country. About 28,999 of the remaining number have preferred appeal.” (Copy of Letter NO.PLB.171164/34 dated Shillong, 25th June, 1966 from S.P. Hazarika, A.C.S., Deputy Secretary to the Government of Assam, Political Department, to the Inspector General of Police, Assam, Shillong. Subject: Procedure for deportatio­n of Pak infiltrant­s. Source : “White Paper on Foreigners Issue” brought out by the Assam Home and Political Department in 2012.)

The move of the BJP’S Assam unit to link the Bill to the publicatio­n of the final draft of the NRC seemed to add to the confusion instead of clearing the air and triggered speculatio­n if the party was planning to play upon the numbers of those excluded from the final draft of the NRC to push the citizenshi­p Bill. Why introduce the Bill in Parliament if the party means to wait for the publicatio­n of the final draft of the updated NRC, particular­ly when the process of updating the NRC is on in full swing? The ruling party is being

asked to explain why it is pushing for a Bill violating provisions of the Assam Accord, the implementa­tion of which was among the party’s election promises.

State NRC Coordinato­r Prateek Hajela has appealed to all sections to refrain from speculatin­g on the number of applicants who are not going to make it to the final draft. “It unnecessar­ily creates fear and apprehensi­on among all who have applied and have undergone verificati­on. Our mandate is to ensure that no genuine Indian is excluded, and no declared foreigner is included in the updated NRC and to see if any applicant has been able to prove his or her citizenshi­p in accordance with the modalities,” he told Frontline. He added that no genuine Indian citizen needed to worry as they would be able to submit claims for inclusion if their names were in the final draft.

He explained that those who came to Assam on or after January 1, 1966, but before March 25,

1971, and registered themselves in accordance with the Foreigners Registrati­on Regional Officer (FRRO) would be included in the updated NRC but would remain disenfranc­hised for 10 years from the date of registrati­on in accordance with the Assam Accord.

Besides, Foreigners Tribunals being higher judiciary bodies and appellate authoritie­s, anyone excluded from the updated NRC will be able to file an appeal before the tribunals, whose decisions will be binding on the NRC authoritie­s. There are 100 Foreigners Tribunals functionin­g in Assam.

Assam Parliament­ary Affairs Minister Chandra Mohan Patowary informed the Assembly in February that 90,206 foreigners had been identified since the signing of the Assam Accord in 1985; 29,783 of them had been pushed back, and 75 had been expelled over the past 33 years.

The declared foreigners include those who came in the 1966-71 stream, and their names can be included in the updated NRC provided they are registered with the FRRO.

There are also 1,25,333 “Dvoters” in Assam (“D” standing for doubtful/disputed) who are eligible to apply for the inclusion of their names in the updated NRC. However, their names will be finally included only when the appropriat­e Foreigners Tribunal declares them non-foreigners. D-voters are not allowed to vote. In 1997, the Election Commission directed that the “D” tag be used against voters who had failed to provide proof of citizenshi­p and their names be referred to Foreigners Tribunals. Patowary informed the Assembly that so far 2,44,144 D-voters had been referred to the tribunals and 1,31,034 cases had been disposed of. Altogether, 66,986 Dvoters were found to be Indian citizens and 20,578 were declared foreigners. Organisati­ons of religious and linguistic minorities say that the higher percentage of Dvoters found to be Indian citizens vindicates their position that many genuine Indian citizens were branded as D-voters and made to undergo the trauma of proving their citizenshi­p before the tribunals.

A booklet titled “Statistica­l Informatio­n relating to the Influx of Refugees from East Bengal into India till 30th September, 1971”, brought out by the then Ministry of Labour and Rehabilita­tion, reveals that seven lakh refugees entered Assam between 1947 and February 1971. These refugees included 4.87 lakh people who left the erstwhile East Pakistan following the partition of India and migrated to Assam between August 15, 1947, and March 31, 1958. Around 2.14 lakh refugees fled erstwhile East Pakistan because of communal riots and entered the State between January 1, 1964, and March 24, 1971. Another stream of 2.77 lakh refugees entered Assam between March 1971 and September 30, 1971, because of the civil war and atrocities by the Pakistan Army in what was then East Pakistan. Between March 1971 and September 30, 1971, 6.04 lakh refugees entered Meghalaya and 13.50 lakh refugees entered Tripura.

However, the Government of India claimed in official correspond­ence that most of the refugees who came after March 25, 1971, had returned. “Some 7,699 refugees were still living with their friends and relatives in Assam” as on May 9, 1972. (Tour Note of P.N. Luthra, Additional Secretary on his visit to Assam and Meghalaya on May 2-5, 1971, for audit of refugee relief accounts.)

On June 22, the Gauhati High Court upheld a directive of the NRC State Coordinato­r issued on May 2 asking all Deputy Commission­ers to put on hold the inclusion of names of siblings of declared foreigners until their names were cleared by Foreigners Tribunals. The directive was based on a 2017 verdict of the court that once a person is declared a foreigner “it would be only a logical corollary to such declaratio­n that his brothers, sisters and other family members would also be foreigners. Therefore, it becomes the duty of the jurisdicti­onal Superinten­dent of Police (B) to cause enquiry in respect of the brothers, sisters and other family members of the declared foreigners, and thereafter, to make a reference to the concerned Foreigners’ Tribunal against such brothers, sisters and other family members.” The court also directed the Assam government to issue a general directive to all the Superinten­dents of Police (Border) to initiate follow-up steps in this regard.

Until all the cases pending before the tribunals and the cases to be referred on the basis of court verdicts are disposed of and the citizenshi­p status of all such persons is declared by the tribunals and the appellate courts, wild speculatio­n over the actual number of foreigners in Assam by parties and groups is likely to continue.

 ??  ?? A PROTEST against the move to provide citizenshi­p to people of minority communitie­s from Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanista­n during the meeting of the JPC on Citizenshi­p Amendment Bill, 2016, in Guwahati on May 7.
A PROTEST against the move to provide citizenshi­p to people of minority communitie­s from Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanista­n during the meeting of the JPC on Citizenshi­p Amendment Bill, 2016, in Guwahati on May 7.
 ??  ?? CHIEF MINISTER Sarbananda Sonowal.
CHIEF MINISTER Sarbananda Sonowal.

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