The Hindu - International

Polls come and go, but enclave residents remain in a time warp

This time, leaders of major political parties have not come to campaign in the settlement­s in Cooch Behar allocated to those who opted to shift to India from Bangladesh­i enclaves; they voted in 2019, but the issues they face remain unresolved

- Shiv Sahay Singh

As speculatio­n over fresh applicatio­ns for the Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act, 2019 and its newly framed Rules dominate the political discourse in West Bengal, Khalilur Rehman (74) says he does not fear the CAA or the National Register of Citizens (NRC), unlike many Muslims of the State.

“We have no fear of the NRC. We have come through a bilateral agreement between India and Bangladesh. How can they force us back again,” Mr. Rehman, resident of an enclave rehabilita­tion centre at Dinhata in Cooch Behar district, says.

A total of 58 families were given accommodat­ion in an apartment block near an agricultur­al market in 2021, after living in camps for almost six years, following the historic exchange of enclaves between India and Bangladesh on July 30, 2015.

In Dinhata, the settlement, housed in a large compound of two-storey blocks, has not seen much political activity in the runup to the Lok Sabha election. Flags of the Trinamool Congress have been put up at a few places in the settlement complex, but leaders from major political parties have not come here to campaign.

Mr. Rehman, his wife and three children came to India in November 2015 from Dashiarcha­ra, a former Indian enclave in Kurigram district of Bangladesh. “We thought we were going to a bigger country, and we felt that there will be more facilities there,” Mr. Rehman said.

The family has preserved various documents, including temporary travel-cum-identity cards issued in pursuance of the exchange of enclaves, as provided in the India-Bangladesh Land Boundary Agreement, and local newspaper cuttings, some with reports that those migrating from Bangladesh would get land in India and cash incentives of ₹5 lakh for each family. In his tworoom apartment, E-2, Mr. Rehman’s wife, Aklima Begum, said that there was no drinking water supply, and the authoritie­s had not provided any documents for the apartment.

The exchange of enclaves came into e¦ect from the midnight of July 31, 2015, when 111 Indian enclaves in four districts of Bangladesh became part of Bangladesh territory, and 51 Bangladesh­i enclaves in Cooch Behar district merged with India.

There was a population of about 34,000 people in the 111 enclaves, and when the option of moving to India was provided, 922 people registered their names and came to India. These people are now living in three settlement­s at Cooch Behar — at Dinhata, Haldibari, and Mekhliganj.

Before moving into the apartment at Dinhata, the 58 families were housed in a makeshift camp at a distance of about 500 metres from their present habitation. The administra­tion was providing free ration to these families, which has stopped since they moved into permanent habitation.

While the apartments were allotted after a lottery, there is a separation in Hindu and Muslim households — Muslim families are located to the left while Hindus are on the right. The majority of apartments on the Muslim side are closed, and neighbours say they have migrated to work in other cities.

Ranjit Barman (30), who lives in the apartment J-3, rues that he has no ownership papers for his apartment. “When parties come to us for votes, we will ask to ensure the ownership of the apartment. We have been asked to move here, but have no ownership documents. We cannot go to Bangladesh, from where we came, without a passport,” Mr. Barman said.

Most of the families say they had land in the erstwhile Indian enclave in Bangladesh, which they could not sell before they moved to India. “We thought we would get land in exchange for the land we could not sell in the old Indian enclave. But we have not got anything. Sometimes we wonder whether we should have come to India at all,” the youth said.

Mr. Barman’s neighbour Laboni Roy echoed a similar sentiment. “Several elections have gone by. We voted for the Lok Sabha elections in 2019, the Assembly elections in 2016 and 2021, and two panchayat elections of 2018 and 2023, yet the issues we have been facing from the start have remained,” Ms. Roy said. “Whatever we were promised, we did not get. We should have stayed in Bangladesh rather than coming here and starting life afresh,” she said.

All the 51 erstwhile Bangladesh enclaves that became part of India are in Cooch Behar district, which is going to the polls on April 19.

 ?? SHIV SAHAY SINGH ?? No relief: The apartment complex at Dinhata in Cooch Behar district where the erstwhile enclave dwellers have been rehabilita­ted.
SHIV SAHAY SINGH No relief: The apartment complex at Dinhata in Cooch Behar district where the erstwhile enclave dwellers have been rehabilita­ted.

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