The Asian Age

‘NRC to be carried out across India’

There will be no discrimina­tion on the basis of religion: Shah Assam govt asks Centre to reject recently-published NRC

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENTS with agency inputs

Union home minister Amit Shah on Wednesday announced in Parliament that the National Register of Citizens (NRC) process will be carried out across the country and added that there would be no discrimina­tion on the basis of religion.

“The process of National Register of Citizens will be carried out across the country. No one irrespecti­ve of their religion should be worried. It is just a process to get everyone under the NRC,” he said while replying to a supplement­ary during Question Hour in the Rajya Sabha.

The home minister said that in Assam, people whose names have not figured in the draft list have the right to go to the Foreigners Tribunals. “Tribunals will be constitute­d across Assam. If any person doesn’t have the money to approach tribunals, then the Assam government will bear the cost to hire a lawyer,” he said.

But within hours of Mr Shah’s announceme­nt, Assam finance minister Himanta Biswa Sarma called a press conference

in Guwahati to say that the state government has requested the Centre to reject the recently published NRC in the state.

“The Assam government has not accepted the NRC. The government of Assam and the BJP have requested the home minister to reject the NRC,” he said, and pitched for a fresh

pan-India NRC with a single cut-off date.

In Assam, the NRC aims to identify illegal immigrants who entered the state and settled after March 25, 1971.

Though the implementa­tion of the NRC in Assam has raised questions of discrimina­tion on the basis of religion, the BJP

in Assam is not happy with the outcome as many of the 19 lakh people left out of the NRC are from the majority community.

Mr Shah’s countrywid­e pitch for NRC drew sharp reaction from West Bengal chief minister and TMC supremo Mamata Banerjee. “A total of 19

lakh people have been left out of the Assam NRC list. Those omitted include Hindus, Bengalis, Muslims, Gorkhas and Buddhists. They have been sent to detention centres. In West Bengal, we (TMC) will never allow any detention centre,” she said, assuring people that she will never allow such a citizens’ register in the state.

Ms Banerjee added the NRC in Assam was part of the Assam Accord signed during the tenure of former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and that the exercise can never be implemente­d across the country.

“There are a few people who are trying to create disturbanc­es in West Bengal in the name of implementa­tion of the NRC. I want to make it very clear, we will never allow NRC in Bengal. No one can take away your citizenshi­p and turn you into a refugee. There can be no division on the basis of religion,” Ms Banerjee said while addressing a public meeting at Sagardighi in Murshidaba­d district.

Before talking about implementi­ng the NRC in West Bengal, the BJP should answer why 14 lakhs Hindus and Bengalis were omitted from the final NRC list in Assam, she said.

Mr Shah told the Rajya Sabha that though the Centre accepts that refugees — Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, Christians, Sikhs and Parsis — who left Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanista­n due to religious atrocities should get Indian citizenshi­p, he added that all citizens of India irrespecti­ve of religion will figure in the NRC list. “There is no provision in the NRC that people belonging to other religions will not be included in the register,” he added. The NRC exercise in Assam followed a Supreme Court order in December 2014 for time-bound implementa­tion, and remains under the court’s direct monitoring.

The RSS has been pushing for the nationwide implementa­tion of the exercise. The RSS’ and the BJP’s top leaders, in fact, held a meeting ahead of the Ram Janmabhoom­i-Babri Masjid title suit verdict by the apex court and the RSS top brass, it was learnt, told the BJP leadership that the NRC should be implemente­d nationwide to check illegal immigrants. The NRC issue is often highlighte­d by the BJP leaders during election campaignin­g.

Assam’s senior BJP leader Sarma, who is also the convenor of the North-East Democratic Alliance, said on Wednesday that there were many flaws in the updated NRC, which was published on August 31 this year, as the mammoth exercise was carried out “unilateral­ly” by the then NRC state coordinato­r Prateek Hajela.

He said since there was no scope to amend it, the state government as well as the ruling BJP have urged the Centre to “dismiss” the NRC in its current form.

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