The Hindu (Bangalore)

Crusaders against two contrastin­g laws face off in Assam’s Dibrugarh

- Rahul Karmakar

The electoral combat in Dibrugarh, the easternmos­t of Assam’s 14 Lok Sabha constituen­cies, is between crusaders against contrastin­g laws involving migrants or refugees from Bangladesh.

BJP heavyweigh­t and Union Minister Sarbananda Sonowal, 61, has a few things in common with his main rival, the 44yearold Lurinjyoti Gogoi of the Assam Jatiya Parishad (AJP) in Dibrugarh. They were leaders of the All Assam Students’ Union, the launch pad for many an aspiring politician in Assam and they rose to prominence handling the “Bangladesh­i” issue, an electoral staple.

Mr. Sonowal fought a legal battle in the Supreme Court to have the Illegal Migrants (Determinat­ion by Tribunals) Act scrapped in 2005 while Mr. Gogoi floated his party primarily to safeguard the interests of the indigenous people by resisting the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act of 2019.

The IM(DT) Act, associated mostly with Bengali Muslims, was said to be loaded in favour of people with doubtful nationalit­y. The CAA, allowing faster citizenshi­p for nonMuslims from India’s neighbouri­ng countries, is perceived to pave the way for Hindus from Bangladesh to settle down in Assam.

The framing of the rules for the CAA ahead of the election has now given Mr. Gogoi and the AJP — one of 16 parties in the Congressle­d United Opposition Forum, Assam — the ammunition to fire salvos at the BJP.

“However much the BJP defends this unconstitu­tional Act, the people of Assam know it will spell doom for them. The CAA is a major issue for us, and we are telling them how their jatiya nayak [national hero, a sobriquet Mr. Sonowal had earned after his legal victory] has turned into a jatiya khalnayak [national villain],” Jagadish Bhuyan, the general secretary of AJP and a former BJP leader, told The Hindu.

The AJP has also been highlighti­ng how the BJP has “betrayed” the aspiration­s of six communitie­s who have been demanding Scheduled Tribe (ST) status for decades.

The Adivasis or tea plantation workers form the largest chunk of voters among these communitie­s followed by the Ahoms, Morans, Mataks, and Chutias.

The Adivasis are largely believed to have gravitated from the Congress towards the BJP over the years. The BJP is banking on them for Mr. Sonowal, who replaced Cabinet colleague and Adivasi leader Rameswar Teli, to register a hattrick of wins for the party in Dibrugarh.

“The BJP believes in taking all communitie­s together and people know we stand for developmen­t. One has to realise the CAA is a Central rule for a humanitari­an cause while the IM(DT) was imposed specifically on Assam,” Mr. Sonowal said.

The BJP, however, is wary of the damage Manoj Dhanowar, the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) candidate can cause. An Adivasi leader and son of former Assam Speaker Rameswar Dhanowar, the AAP candidate has been working primarily among the plantation workers.

The AAP defied the Opposition alliance’s understand­ing to field Mr. Dhanowar. But the contest is expected to be between Mr. Sonowal and Mr. Gogoi, whose critics point out that he could not capitalise on the antiCAA sentiments to win any of the two Assembly seats he contested in 2021.

 ?? SPECIAL ARRANGEMEN­T ?? At odds: Union Minister Sarbananda Sonowal campaigns for the Lok Sabha election in Assam’s Dibrugarh.
SPECIAL ARRANGEMEN­T At odds: Union Minister Sarbananda Sonowal campaigns for the Lok Sabha election in Assam’s Dibrugarh.

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