The Hindu (Tiruchirapalli)

AMAN WADUD: ASSAM’S ADVOCATE This lawyerturn­edpolitici­an is fighting the National Register of Citizens (NRC) for people’s right to live with dignity

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When the first list of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) was released in Assam in 2018, it excluded 4 million residents. They had to reapply to be included and submit their biometrics. That day, lawyer Aman Wadud got a call from a 77yearold Bengali Hindu retired professor seeking help.

Wadud, 38, defends those Indians with long family histories in this country, who struggle to prove their citizenshi­p in Assam’s quasi legal ‘Foreigners Tribunals’.

It is largely thanks to people like Wadud that we first realised something deeply problemati­c was happening in the border state. When he helped release Moinal Molla after 2 years, 11 months and 29 days of detention, he posted an image of the frail book binder with the caption: ‘Moinal Molla’s Long Walk to Freedom’. “By then I had read Nelson Mandela, and the post went viral,” he said.

He introduced a wider audience to a dystopian world where the most marginalis­ed were labelled ‘Bangladesh­is’ or ‘D (doubtful) voters’ for the tiniest discrepanc­ies in their carefully preserved identity documents; and ‘detention centres’ where people were summarily taken after being declared ‘illegal migrants’, and where they stayed for years, estranged from families. In 2018, the Central government commission­ed the country’s largest 15.5 acre Matia ‘transit camp’ in Assam. It opened last year.

People’s rights

Now, after a decade of fighting hundreds of citizenshi­p cases pro bono, Wadud wants to “play a bigger role” and fights all types of constituti­onal law cases. He has joined the Indian National Congress and was recently appointed joint convenor of the party’s leadership developmen­t mission in Assam.

It all has to do with a thought that struck him when the professor called. Wadud told the gent that the country’s top court had ratified the NRC process and that, if he was on the list, he had no option but to submit his biometrics. “There was a pause, his voice choked, he broke down, saying ‘it hurts my dignity, I cannot submit my biometrics’. He said this repeatedly and it made me think, in the 45 years I had been working for citizenshi­p, no one had spoken about dignity.”

Wadud asked clients who had been released from detention centres how the ordeal had made them feel. They listed anger, despair, resignatio­n. Some viewed it as a test from god. “They didn’t speak about the indignity they faced,” Wadud said. “The professor had articulate­d his thoughts in a way I hadn’t heard before.”

That’s around the time he began talking to people about how the state was violating their dignity. “It’s important to talk about constituti­onal rights to people, they are still very ignorant about their rights,” he added.

Foray into politics

Looking back at his own life, Wadud saw many points where his dignity had been attacked. Like the time a classmate in Guwahati called his teenage self a Bangladesh­i. “It was an expression of indignity, to show me I’m not equal, I don’t have the same rights as other students in that class,” he said. When he moved to Bengaluru in 2005 to study law, he spent a large chunk of his money in the city’s bookstores, reading Nehru, Gandhi, Maulana Azad, Benjamin Franklin and Anne Frank.

At first, Wadud wanted to be a

Aman Wadud recently joined the Indian National Congress, and hopes to contest the 2026 State elections.

“big shot lawyer like Kapil Sibal, Abhishek Manu Singhvi”. But the guilt that he was not doing anything to help people back home gnawed at him. “I wanted to be the voice of my people, change the narrative.” He did just that when he returned to Assam and put faces and stories to Indians who were being stripped of their citizenshi­p.

When he switches on the TV, Wadud said, he watches the dignity of Assam’s Muslims eroding. “The way elected functionar­ies address us is a perennial violation of our fundamenta­l right to live with dignity. Not just detaining or accusing us as Bangladesh­i, the entire discourse is very undignifie­d,” he said.

Politics is a different struggle, one that requires financial heft and influence. “In politics you need money and a godfather, both of which I don’t have,” he said. “But I’m trying to make my presence felt through my work.” Wadud hopes to contest the 2026 State elections.

Every time he presents a case before the Foreigners Tribunal, a thought crosses his mind: “What if my classmate was a police officer? Then I would have been the one defending my citizenshi­p.”

is a Bengalurub­ased journalist and the cofounder of India Love Project on Instagram.

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