Millennium Post (Kolkata)

No provision to maintain records of applicatio­ns under CAA rules: RTI reply

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There is no provision under the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, 2019 and its rules, notified on March 11, to maintain records of citizenshi­p applicatio­ns filed online under the law, according to an RTI reply by the Union Home Ministry.

The ministry’s response came to RTI applicatio­ns filed by Bangla Pokkho, an organisati­on that claims to work for the rights of Bengalis, seeking informatio­n on the number of people who applied for citizenshi­p through the website provided by the Home Ministry on March 12 and 13, the two days following the notificati­on of the CAA rules.

The Union Home Ministry in a communicat­ion (F No 26027/94/2024-IC-I, dated April 15, 2024) stated, “… that the records are not being maintained as desired by you because the Citizenshi­p Act, 1955 & Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, 2019 and the rules made thereunder does not have the provision to maintain the records of Citizenshi­p applicatio­n received.”

“Further, as per the RTI Act, 2005, CPIO is not authorised to create informatio­n. Hence the informatio­n sought may be treated as NIL,” said the communicat­ion.

The RTI applicatio­ns were filed by Md Sahin of Bangla Pokkho.

“Such a response is ridiculous given that all CAA applicatio­ns are made online and are centrally digitised,” said Garga Chatterjee, general secretary of Bangla Pokkho.

Chatterjee claimed that the people may be reluctant to apply due to the mandatory requiremen­t to declare under affidavit the applicant’s country of origin and upload it on the website with documentar­y evidence. “Since Indian refugees, including Hindu Bengali refugees like the Matuas, are

already enjoying citizenshi­p by the virtue of documents like Aadhar, ration and EPIC cards which they already possess, they have no wish to declare themselves as foreigners,” Chatterjee claimed.

He claimed the CAA was “never designed to confer Indian citizenshi­p to Hindu Bengali refugees but to identify Hindu Bengalis having Pakistani or Bangladesh­i origins”, and called the whole exercise “a fraud”.

The BJP came out with a sharp response to the allegation­s, calling it attempts by the opposition to mislead the people.

“Every law, once notified, requires a teething period before it is enforced completely. This is such a period,” said Samik Bhattachar­ya, BJP MP and the spokespers­on of the party’s West Bengal unit.

“Since the elections are knocking on the doors, we have, for the time being, only held back the required push that’s needed to be given to people for applying for CAA,” he said.

Citing the “present lack of infrastruc­ture and other factors needed to reach out to the prospectiv­e applicants”, Bhattachar­ya asserted that the BJP would go full throttle for CAA implementa­tion once the elections are over.

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REPRESENTA­TIONAL IMAGE

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