The Korea Times

What’s in a name? India’s citizenshi­p drive hits women hardest

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GUWAHATI (Reuters) — Abanti Deka had no idea when she married her husband that taking his name would jeopardize her Indian citizenshi­p.

That was before authoritie­s in the northeast Indian state of Assam, where she has lived all her life, launched a vast and highly contentiou­s exercise to register all its citizens as part of a campaign against illegal immigratio­n.

When the register was published at the end of August, the names of nearly 2 million of the state’s about 33 million people were missing, plunging them into a bureaucrat­ic nightmare that human rights experts fear could render some stateless.

Abanti was one of the unlucky ones.

“The notice came suddenly,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation at her lawyer’s office.

“I don’t understand. I was born here, I have voted here before, but suddenly none of that matters any more.”

Resentment against illegal immigrants has simmered for years in Assam, one of India’s poorest states, with residents blaming outsiders for taking their jobs and land.

To be included on the register, residents had to produce documents proving their families lived in India before March 24, 1971, when hundreds of thousands of people began fleeing conflict across the border in what is now Bangladesh.

Lawyers and campaigner­s dealing with such cases say they present particular challenges for women.

About one in three women in Assam is illiterate — a higher proportion than for men — and many marry young, moving away from home and losing access to any documents that might prove their origins.

They also take their husbands’ names, a move that has complicate­d things further for many married women in a region where family names are markers of ethnic and religious affiliatio­n.

“The women have had to pay a higher price,” said Tanya Laskar, a lawyer working on such cases.

“They have struggled the hardest to get relevant documents and many failed because they were child brides or the family did not put their names on a land document because women are not entitled to property in many homes.”

 ?? AFP-Yonhap ?? Married Hindu women perform rituals with a banana plant, sacred to Hindus, on the first day of Durga Puja festival on the banks of the Hooghly River in Kolkata, India, Saturday.
AFP-Yonhap Married Hindu women perform rituals with a banana plant, sacred to Hindus, on the first day of Durga Puja festival on the banks of the Hooghly River in Kolkata, India, Saturday.

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