NPR process can’t be applied for NRC: Shah
Says Modi govt not building any new detention centres
NEWDELHI: In a bid to dispel apprehensions about the upcoming exercise to update the National Population Register (NPR), home minister Amit Shah said categorically on Tuesday that data collected for NPR would not be used for the controversial National Register of Citizens (NRC).
There is no link between the NPR and the proposed NRC, said Shah, who has often batted for a pan-india NRC. He also denied the construction of any detention centres to house people suspected to be illegal immigrants and echoed Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s remarks at Sunday’s Delhi rally that the NRC hadn’t even been discussed in the government. “The PM is right. There is no discussion in the government on the issue,” Shah said.
Shah also tried to clarify that the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, or CAA, which has triggered protests in parts of India, will not lead to any Indian’s citizenship being snatched away. He said “the act is only meant to give citizenship” and told Muslims not to be afraid of the NPR exercise.
The CAA is aimed at fasttracking the grant of Indian citizenship to members of religious minorities from the Muslim-majority countries of Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan. The NPR is a list of “usual residents” of the country, defined as people who have resided in a local area for the past six months or more or people who intend to reside in that area for the next six months or more. The NRC is aimed at identifying illegal immigrants, and there has been some concern that the NPR would be a stepping stone to the NRC.
Minutes after the Union cabinet cleared a proposal to update the NPR, Shah, in an interview to ANI, said the NPR and NRC were unrelated. “The process involved in the NPR can never be used for NRC as the two processes are very different,” he said, adding that the registration in NPR would be done without any documentary proof.
Shah linked the NPR, an exercise first carried out in 2010 by the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government, to social welfare schemes for the poor.
He also said that people would not be required to give all the information sought in the exercise and some questions can be left unanswered. “Questions will be asked on the size of the house and number of pet animals. But if this survey (NPR) had not been done, we could not have given free cooking gas to rural women (in the Ujjwala scheme),” he said. “If they (UPA) do, it’s fine but if we do then there is a problem. Why so? I will also appeal to Kerala and West Bengal chief ministers that don’t take such steps ,” he said, referring to the two states’ announcements that they would stall the NPR process.
Asked if the NPR would entail finding out how long a person had lived in a particular area, Shah cited the example of how in Gujarat, many people from Bihar, Uttar Pradesh or Odisha live and work. “If we don’t know how many people from Odisha or Bihar live in an area, how do we decide how many Odiya medium schools or Hindi medium schools should be opened in Gujarat, where most of the schools offer education in Gujarati,”’ he asked.
Shah explained why the cabinet needed to approve the plan to update NPR at this time, when anti-caa protests are still simmering in parts of the country. He said that by April 2020, the government has to map all houses, train people and open offices for NPR. The government is 15-20 days late in starting the process, which will be updated simultaneously with the 2011 Census.
He also rebutted allegations that the government was building detention centres. “We can’t keep such foreigners in jails. We keep them in detention centres and contact their embassies. This is been done for a long time. In the US too, there are detention centres,” he said, adding that no one had been housed in such centres in Assam.
While he admitted that there may have been some lapse in communication between the government and the people, he said protestors were “provoked by political parties.”