Students threaten stir if refugees stay in Arunachal
Guwahati: The home ministry’s decision to grant citizenship to nearly one lakh Chakma and Hajong may create unrest in Arunachal Pradesh. Hawa Bagang, president of the powerful All-Arunachal Pradesh Students Union, which is spearheading the agitation against ChakmaHajong refugees, said that any move to impose the burden of Chakma and Hajong refugees on Arunachal Pradesh will be met with resistance. “The home ministry should try to understand the sentiment of Arunachalee people before taking any decision on this issue,” Mr Bagang said.
The home ministry’s decision to grant citizenship to nearly one lakh Chakma and Hajong may create unrest in the frontier state of Arunachal Pradesh.
Hawa Bagang, president of the All-Arunachal Pradesh Students’ Union, which is spearheading the agitation against Chakma-Hajong refugees, said any move to impose the burden of Chakma and Hajong refugees on Arunachal will be met with resistance. “The home ministry should try to understand the sentiment of Arunachali people before taking any decision on this issue,” Mr Bagang said.
“We have no problem if government of India grants citizenship to Chakma and Hajong refugees but before doing it, home ministry should take them out of Arunachal Pradesh and give settlement in the state where they intend to give settlement,” he said.
He said that anger among the people is such that youth may take to arms to resist the move of giving citizenship to Chakma and Hajong refugees in the frontier state. He said, “Arunachal Pradesh has been accorded special constitutional status and rights of indigenous people has The home ministry should try to understand the sentiment of Arunachali people before taking any decision
— Hawa Bagang, Students’ leaders been protected by Inner-Line Permit. Any move to grant them citizenship without removing them from the state would infringe upon the existing constitutional provision.”
There are now more than three lakh Chakma and Hajong refugees in Arunachal Pradesh. Though migration started five decades ago from the erstwhile East Pakistan when about 56 families first migrated to the state in 1966 but it continued even now and their population has grown to three lakh.
Chakmas and Hajongs were originally residents of Chittagong Hill Tracts in the erstwhile East Pakistan. They left their homeland when it was submerged by the Kaptai dam project in the 1960s.
The Chakmas, who are Buddhists, and the Hajongs, who are Hindus, also allegedly faced religious persecution and entered India through the then Lushai Hills district of Assam (now Mizoram).