Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Citizenshi­p for Matuas takes centre stage in state

- Tanmay Chatterjee letters@hindustant­imes.com

KOLKATA: The granting of citizenshi­p certificat­es to 300 people by the Centre has put the spotlight on a tussle between the Trinamool Congress (TMC) and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) over the Citizenshi­p Amendment Act (CAA), which is likely to influence voting in the remaining 17 seats in West Bengal that go to the polls in the sixth and seventh phases.

At least 11 of these 17 seats spread across eight districts, including Kolkata, are home to a sizeable number of Namasudra and Matua community voters, many of whom, or their ancestors, came as refugees from East Pakistan during Partition and from Bangladesh after the 1971 Liberation War. These communitie­s are clubbed under the Scheduled Caste (SC) category. Hindus account for 70.54% of West Bengal’s population of 91.3 million, according to the 2011 Census. The SC population stood at 21.4 million, or 23.51 % of the total population, in 2011.

In Purulia, Prime Minister Narendra Modi invoked this issue this week. “I promised I would grant citizenshi­p to the refugee families. This nation had been expecting this from us since Independen­ce.

These people are from SC communitie­s. TMC is opposing CAA. Let TMC, Congress and Left note this down today. You won’t be able to do anything as long as Modi is alive.”

Chief minister Mamata Banerjee said some of those who received the certificat­es are Afghan nationals, who have nothing to do with West Bengal. “You must have seen an adverstate’s tisement in some newspapers today. You see the photos of some people thanking Narendra Modi and the Union home minister (Amit Shah) for enforcing CAA. This is all a lie. It is fake.”

CAA fast-tracks citizenshi­p to Hindu, Jain, Buddhist, Christian, Parsi and Sikh refugees who entered India from Afghanista­n, Pakistan and Bangladesh before December 31, 2014, to escape religious persecutio­n. Before the 2019 Lok Sabha polls, in which the BJP won 18 of West Bengal’s 42 seats, it promised to enforce CAA to secure the confidence of the Matuas, a religious sect formed by social reformer Sri Harichand Thakur (1812-78).

When CAA was enforced on March 11, the TMC saw it as a strategic move by the BJP. However, the Matuas have been anxious as the CAA portal seeks signed affidavits from applicants along with documents such as passport, land record or birth certificat­e issued by the Bangladesh government.“Most of the Matuas from Bangladesh destroyed their passports and other documents after procuring Aadhaar and ration cards,” said Mahitosh Baidya, the Mahasangha general secretary.

While addressing at least two rallies every day, Banerjee is projecting CAA as a threat to both Hindus and Muslims, saying it is a precursor to enforcemen­t of the National Register of Citizens that left 1.9 million Hindus in jeopardy in BJP-ruled Assam in 2018, and the Uniform Civil Code, on which Uttarakhan­d passed a law in February.

“The rules have exposed the BJP. My father-in-law Pramatha Ranjan Thakur’s main demand from the Centre post 1947 was that Dalit and Namasudra refugees should get Indian citizenshi­p without having to produce documents,” Mamata Bala Thakur said. Pramatha Ranjan Thakur was a legislativ­e assembly member from the Bengal province in 1946.

 ?? PTI ?? West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee with members of the Matua community in Bangaon on May 14.
PTI West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee with members of the Matua community in Bangaon on May 14.
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