Oman Daily Observer

No illegal immigrants allowed to stay: Govt

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NEW DELHI: India’s home affairs minister on Sunday said his government “will not allow a single illegal immigrant to stay”, as he visited Assam state where a controvers­ial citizenshi­p register sparked uproar from the almost two million people excluded.

The register, feared to be a cover for the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party to expel minorities, has ensnared many locals who are a vote bank for the party.

Senior figures in the party had shied away from commenting on the list, published on August 30 and which sparked an outcry from local BJP leaders over Hindus who were omitted.

The home affairs ministry, paraphrasi­ng a speech by Home Affairs Minister Amit Shah in the northeaste­rn state, said he was satisfied with the “timely completion of the process’’.

“Shah... also added that the government will not allow a single illegal immigrant to stay back in the country,” the statement said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government had backed the National Register of Citizens (NRC), saying it was aimed at weeding out “foreign infiltrato­rs’’.

Shah, Modi’s right-hand man, previously said India must act against “infiltrato­rs who were eating the country like termites”.

During his visit, Shah was expected to be pressed by the local BJP leadership for his government to pass legislatio­n to protect the rights of what it says are genuine citizens excluded from the list.

While there are no clear answers as to how or why individual­s have been included or excluded, bureaucrat­ic bungling amid the mountains of paperwork appears to be one factor.

Assam, a poor and isolated state of 33 million, is largely surrounded by Bangladesh and has long seen influxes of migrants.

But under the NRC, only those who can demonstrat­e they or their forebears were in India before 1971 can be included in the list.

Shah did not make further comments about the NRC. Those left off the register have 120 days to appeal at Foreigners Tribunals, and if they fail, they can appeal that decision through the courts. The national government has stressed that those omitted will not become stateless.

Touching on New Delhi’s contentiou­s move on August 5 to strip autonomy status of Kashmir, Shah stressed his government would not revoke another constituti­onal clause for several states — most in the northeast.

The Article 371 clause, which also covers Assam, is aimed at preserving the local culture of those states.

“I have clarified in parliament that this is not going to happen and I am saying it again today in Assam,” he said. Opposition politician­s had questioned Modi’s government on whether those special rights would also be scrapped after the Kashmir move.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Workers work at a constructi­on site of a detention centre for illegal immigrants at a village in Goalpara district of Assam.
— Reuters Workers work at a constructi­on site of a detention centre for illegal immigrants at a village in Goalpara district of Assam.

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