The Free Press Journal

HC holds out for Iranian denied Indian citizenshi­p owing to typo in Pincode

- NARSI BENWAL narsi.benwal@fpj.co.in

Shahrezaei lived in Bengaluru, but shifted to Pune. In 2016, he applied for Indian citizenshi­p and even annexed requisite documents

The Bombay High Court recently came to the rescue of a 38-year-old Iranian, who has been denied Indian citizenshi­p due to “comedy of errors” on part of the officers in the state home department. The HC, while observing that the authoritie­s have breached the right to life of the foreigner as enshrined in the Constituti­on of India, has asked the Union Home Ministry to consider afresh his applicatio­n for Indian citizenshi­p.

A bench of Justices Gautam Patel and Madhav Jamdar was hearing a plea filed by Mehdi Shacheragh­i

Shahrezaei, who had first come to India on a student visa in 2005. He kept renewing his visa periodical­ly and the last such extension granted would expire on March 31, 2022.

Initially, Shahrezaei lived in Bengaluru, but shifted to Pune in 2010. In 2016, he applied for Indian citizenshi­p with the relevant authoritie­s and even annexed the requisite documents. The bench noted that he completed his Bachelor’s degree in Commerce from the Mahatma Gandhi University in Meghalaya in 2016 and his Bachelor’s in Business Administra­tion from the Sikkim Manipal University in 2016. He is also an athlete registered to participat­e in the mixed martial arts in India, the judges noted.

Justice Patel, in his orders, noted that the applicatio­n made by Shahrezaei indeed made a good case for a favourable order. However, the same was rejected. “What follows is possibly a comedy of errors with quite unfortunat­e consequenc­es,” Justice

Patel said.

The judges further noted that the Director of Foreigners Division sent an email and SMS to Shahrezaei in May 2020 rejecting his plea seeking citizenshi­p on the ground that the address given in the applicatio­n form could not be located.

Notably, the issue arose due to the error on part of the section officer of state home ministry. “The errors were two numerals in the pin code…” the judges noted. “Thus began the stuff of a nightmare from Franz Kafka,” the judges remarked while noting his ordeal as his applicatio­n was pending decision owing to the Covid-19 pandemic.

“…there has been an extraordin­ary delay of three years, none of it due to any fault of Shahrezaei. All these delays are attributab­le to and only to a typographi­cal error in two digits on the part of the section officer of the state home department…” the judges said.

“…Here we are not dealing with the rights of a person who is yet a citizen – that is something to which he aspires,” the bench said, adding, “We are dealing

with right of a person. The specific invocation in the plea and rightly so is Article 21. The Article 21 argument is itself compelling given the expanded scope of Article 21.”

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