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Assam threatened by illegal Muslim immigrants

who are you to judge that?

We are sons of this soil,we decide who is what,not you

Sons of the soil?

Those whom you are attacking, without knowledge, without sense, are more sons of the soil than you are. They tend the soil; you are just part of a gentrified pack which has lost all connection with their roots. And like other packs, these gentrified packs have nothing better to do than to roam the streets looking for trouble.
 
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http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...e-givent-st-status-rijiju/article18266399.ece

Union minister Kiren Rijiju has said Chakma and Hajong communities cannot be granted Scheduled Tribe status in Aunachal Pradesh.

“The issue of Chakma and Hajong is very sensitive and we cannot grant them Schedule Tribe status in Arunachal Pradesh. I have also filed an affidavit in Supreme Court on the matter” the Union Minister of State for Home Affairs said.

On the issue he would do his best in his capacity at the central level, Mr. Rijiju said at the two-day state executive meeting of the BJP in the city on Thursday.

On the Assam - Arunachal boundary issues, Mr. Rijiju said that he had already written to the ministry concerned and chief ministers of both Assam and Arunachal Pradesh should come forward with an amicable solution.

He also said that the construction of a four-lane NH - 415 would soon be a reality and for that the central government had already assured to provide an extra package, a party release said here on Friday.
 
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http://www.hindustantimes.com/india...ugh-weather/story-nAwIoDHlLDnv5nBvu5noQK.html
_ce207458-448f-11e7-815c-f4e1adc20f07.JPG

The Buddhist Chakmas (in pic) and Hindu Hajongs began trickling into India in the early 1960s after the Kaptai dam project submerged their land in Chittagong Hill Tracts. (Pronib Das/HT Photo)
http://www.hindustantimes.com/india...ugh-weather/story-nAwIoDHlLDnv5nBvu5noQK.html

The BJP’s “test case” for granting citizenship to non-Muslims who fled or are fleeing persecution in Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan has run into rough weather in Arunachal Pradesh.

Much before the issue of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh hit turbulence in Assam in 1979, Arunachal Pradesh grappled with Chakma and Hajong refugees displaced from erstwhile East Pakistan in the 1960s.

The Narendra Modi government’s decision to grant the Chakmas and Hajongs citizenship to honour a 2015 Supreme Court directive has stoked anger in the frontier state. Several NGOs have threatened to oppose the move.

Last Saturday, the All Arunachal Pradesh Students’ Union (AAPSU), the apex students’ body of the state, organised a consultative meeting of NGOs representing indigenous communities who fear being affected by Delhi’s decision.

“The Union home ministry took this decision despite assuring us otherwise. We vehemently oppose the move to grant citizenship to Chakma and Hajong refugees,” said AAPSU president Hawa Bagang. “We called an all-party meeting, where the presence of all 60 Arunachal MLAs and the state’s three MPs is mandatory.” The meeting is scheduled within a week, he said.

The students’ body, which launched the movement against the refugees in 1990, fears citizenship would reduce indigenous tribes such as Tai-Khampti, Singpho and Mishmi to a minority, besides robbing them of beneficiary schemes.

“Unlike the Tibetan refugees, who stay in designated camps, the Chakmas and Hajongs have spread out and established settlements by encroaching upon forest areas,” Bagang said.

The population of Chakmas and Hajongs was about 5,000 when Delhi had them moved to southern Arunachal Pradesh between 1964 and 1969. Their population is now about 100,000.

The AAPSU said the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) could be using the Chakma and Hajong refugees as a “test case for its Hindutva-centric plan to embrace non-Muslims from India’s neighbourhood, specifically Hindus from Bangladesh”.

Displaced by dam, religious persecution

_32b7d554-4491-11e7-815c-f4e1adc20f07.JPG

Members of the Singpho tribe. Singphos and Tangsas are indigenous tribes of southern Arunachal Pradesh in whose area the Chakma and Hajong refugees were settled. (Pronib Das/HT Photo)

The Buddhist Chakma and Hindu Hajong refugees began trickling into India in the early 1960s via present-day Mizoram — then the Lushai Hills district of Assam — after the Kaptai dam project submerged their land in Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT).

A simultaneous move by East Pakistan, as Bangladesh was called before independence in 1971, to settle Muslims in CHT also forced many Chakmas and Hajongs out. The government in Delhi decided to shift the refugees to the sparely populated southern part of North East Frontier Agency, which later became Arunachal Pradesh.

“The settlement of Chakmas and Hajongs in our land was done by keeping our people in the dark,” Thingnong Umbu, chief adviser of All Tai-Khampti Singpho Students’ Union, said. He added that Delhi had initially allowed the refugees to stay temporarily for five to 10 years.

The AAPSU said the issue of Chakmas and Hajongs or their repatriation was left out when former prime minister Indira Gandhi and Sheikh Mujibur Rahman of Bangladesh signed the treaty of peace and friendship on March 19, 1972.

Bagang said, “Former MPs and people in areas where Chakmas and Hajongs have been settled kept appealing to Delhi to either confine them in designated camps or shift them out. Finally, AAPSU mobilised all political parties and organised a people’s referendum rally on September 20, 1995 for total removal of Chakmas and Hajongs from Arunachal Pradesh.”

But the Committee for Citizenship Rights of the Chakmas and Hajongs of Arunachal Pradesh (CCRCHAP), whose petition made Supreme Court rule in favour of their citizenship in 2015, said the two communities deserve to become Indians after more than 50 years of stay.

When the Congress in Arunachal Pradesh joined the campaign to oust Chakmas and Hajongs, CCRCHAP reminded the party’s state unit president, Takam Sanjoy, of the Congress’s stand on the issue.


“Successive Congress-led governments at the Centre recommended granting of citizenship to the Chakmas and Hajongs of Arunachal Pradesh in 1972, 1982, 1992 and in 1994, and we expect that the Arunachal PCC (Pradesh Congress Committee) will honour the decisions of their previous governments,” said CCRCHAP general secretary Santosh Chakma.

Reports citing the Ministry of Home Affairs said Delhi is trying to find a way out of the complication by proposing measures such as requiring the Chakmas and Hajongs — like other Indians not residing in Arunachal Pradesh — to possess extendable inner-line permit and not granting them rights to purchase land.

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Members of the Tangsa tribe. The population of Chakmas and Hajongs was about 5,000 when Delhi had them moved to southern Arunachal Pradesh between 1964 and 1969. Their population is now about 100,000. (Pronib Das/HT Photo)

Apprehensive Assam

NGOs such as All Assam Students’ Union (AASU) are apprehensive of the move to give Chakmas and Hajongs citizenship status in Arunachal Pradesh. The AASU had spearheaded the anti-foreigners Assam Agitation from 1979-1985.

The prime reason for this apprehension is the Modi government’s move to grant citizenship to non-Muslim refugees who had fled persecution in India’s neighbourhood.

The Modi government had in December 2014 proposed to revise the Citizenship (Amendment) Act of 1955 for granting Indian citizenship to all Hindus, Parsis, Christians, Buddhists and Sikhs of Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan who are “seeking refuge due to religious persecution or fear of religious persecution”.

The bill envisages reducing the period of stay of such refugees in India from 11 years to six years to become citizens.

Assam is particularly worried about 1.5 lakh undocumented Hindu refugees who came from Bangladesh after March 24, 1971, the cut-off date for detecting, detaining and deporting illegal immigrants as per the Assam Accord of 1985 that ended the six-year Assam Agitation.

“The move is contradictory to the Assam Accord that says any person, whether a Hindu or Muslim, would be deemed illegal if found entering the state from Bangladesh after the cut-off date. We will not allow this to happen,” said AASU adviser Samujjal Bhattacharyya.

Clause 6A of Assam Accord, which specifies the status of refugees or infiltrators after the cut-off date, was inserted by the Rajiv Gandhi government. The indigenous Assamese, who threw their weight behind the anti-foreigners’ stir, consider the accord as an inviolable official and legal document that ensures protection of their land, language and culture.

Protection of land, language and culture was the plank that made the BJP-led coalition come to power in Assam a year ago.

Assam chief minister Sarbananda Sonowal is quiet on the issue. But finance and health minister Himanta Biswa Sarma, virtually the second-in-command, said granting citizenship to Hindu Bangladeshis would benefit Assam as it would prevent Muslims from becoming the majority community.

“Hindus are 68% of the state’s population. Because of rapid population growth, the immigrant Muslims are set to become a majority in the state in the coming days. Under such circumstances, granting citizenship to Hindu migrants from Bangladesh will prevent Assam from becoming a Muslim-dominated state,” Sarma said a few weeks ago.

Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), the BJP’s ruling ally, has not taken any stand against the move, but party leader and former chief minister Prafulla Kumar Mahanta has been vocal. “It is the duty of AGP to ensure the Assam Accord is not diluted. They party has direct links to it,” he said.

The AGP, of which Sonowal was a leader until he joined BJP in 2011, was born out of the accord.

Sonowal became the ‘jatiyo nayak’ (community hero) after he — on behalf of AGP — won a long-drawn Supreme Court battle to scrap the Illegal Migrants (Determination by Tribunal) Act of 1983 that was perceived to be heavily loaded in favour of illegal immigrants in Assam.

http://www.hindustantimes.com/india...ed-in-assam/story-gJ8xFO8Uil0nIzrR60e9PO.html

A Bangladeshi infiltrator, absconding after declared an illegal foreigner, was arrested at Silbhanga in Morigaon district on Tuesday.

Acting on a tip-off, Farid Ali was arrested when he was taking shelter with a family in the village, border inspector of Assam police for Morigaon district D Bora said.

The 32-year old Bangladeshi was declared as an illegal foreigner by the Foreigners Tribunal and the verdict was upheld by the Gauhati High Court last year.

Police sent the Bangladeshi to the detention camp in Tezpur, Bora said.
 
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There are many Rohingyas who have some 10-15 children each. Reason? They feel threatened because of the ongoing persecution in Burma and think that numerical strength may save them. The Muslims in the North East are in no different situation than the Rohingyas.

Did numerical strength solve anything ?
 
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Financial help to repair historic Sikh gurdwaras in Assam and assistance to Assamese Sikhs to go on pilgrimage to prominent religious sites as given to other minority communities were among the demands
india Updated: Sep 02, 2017 00:28 IST
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Utpal Parashar
Hindustan Times, Guwahati
_1fb39456-8f47-11e7-af36-115e347150c8.jpeg

Manjinder Singh Sirsa (with scarf) of Delhi Shiromani Gurdwara Management Committee, during his visit to Assam.(HT Photo)
http://www.hindustantimes.com/india...hs-in-assam/story-LbCnlLukmfVD5C5nkKMPqL.html


They came to Assam from Punjab nearly 200 years ago as soldiers but settled down and assimilated into Assamese society while retaining their religious identity. Now, Assamese Sikhs, who number around 12,000, fear losing their unique identity and want special status and facilities from the state government.

They found a voice this week through a delegation of Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee (DSGMC) that met chief minister Sarbananda Sonowal and apprised him of the problems faced by the Assamese Sikhs.

“The Assamese Sikhs are a microscopic minority community but they have been ignored by successive governments. If this continues, the community may become extinct,” said DSGMC general secretary Manjinder Singh Sirsa.

Taking note of a report in Hindustan Times ahead of last year’s assembly polls on how the community gets neglected by parties and successive state governments, the DSGMC reached out to the Assamese Sikhs .

Apart from special status, the delegation wants setting up of a world-class education complex at Borkhola in Nagaon for the community and reservation in educational institutions and government jobs. They also sought reservation in the state assembly, urban and rural local bodies, establishment of a skill development centre and plots of land in Guwahati and Nagaon to set up social welfare projects.

Financial help to repair historic Sikh gurdwaras in Assam and assistance to Assamese Sikhs to go on pilgrimage to prominent religious sites as given to other minority communities were among the demands.

“The chief minister gave a very patient hearing and assured us that the problems faced by the community would be addressed. He also appointed a senior IAS officer as nodal officer to look into and implement our demands,” said Sirsa. Most of the Assamese Sikhs are descendants of 500 soldiers who were sent by Maharaja Ranjit Singh of Punjab to help Ahom king Chandra Kanta Singha fight invaders in 1822.
 
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India imploding from within. I love the rhetoric from the Hindu nationalists about being threatened LOL
 
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25th-feroze-vaGP5TG6M04jpgjpg

File photo of Chakmas in Jyotiput Chakma refugee village in Arunachal Pradesh. | Photo Credit: Ritu Raj Konwar

http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/chakmas-to-be-made-citizens/article19671965.ece

Over one lakh Chakma-Hajongs, Buddhists and Hindus fled Chittagong Hill area to India during the 1960s.

As the government remains undecided on the procedure to deport the Rohingyas, it is all set to give citizenship to over one lakh Chakma-Hajongs, Buddhists and Hindus who fled to India in the 1960s to escape religious persecution in the Chittagong Hill area of Bangladesh (undivided Pakistan then).

Home Minister Rajnath Singh will chair a meeting on Wednesday where a final decision to grant citizenship to the Chakma-Hajongs will be taken. Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Pema Khandu will also be present.

A senior Home Ministry official said they would be granted citizenship but will not have any land ownership rights in Arunachal Pradesh, a predominantly tribal State. The Arunachalis have opposed giving any rights to Chakma-Hajongs.

“They would be free to buy land anywhere else in India but not in Arunachal Pradesh. They could continue to live in the transit camps where they have been housed since 1964-65,” said the official.

On Tuesday, while responding to a question regarding deportation of Rohingya, Mr. Singh told a press conference in Jammu, “we have plans for illegal immigrants and some action will be taken soon.”

“They are illegal immigrants and we are not ruling out the possibility of a security threat. Wait and watch,” he added.

The Home Ministry official said they were yet to formalise a procedure for deportation.

“Any procedure on deportation of Rohingya will be an extrapolation of the existing policy on Bangladesh. First step is to identify them as most of them claim they are Indians. The number of Rohingya living in India is an estimate by the intelligence agencies,” said the official.

The official said identifying an undocumented citizen was a long process. “The local police will have to enquire if the person is not an Indian citizen. Then he or she will be declared a foreigner. A foreigner not having a document is an illegal immigrant. A communication will be sent to the Myanmar government to verify their address. Deporting them will be the last step and the process has not been finalised yet,” he said.

On Tuesday, Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, had slammed India for its plan to deport the Rohingya. “India cannot carry out collective expulsions, or return people to a place where they risk torture or other serious violations.”

Reacting to the statement, Mr. Rijiju had said the government had not firmed up a plan to deport the Rohingyas yet and had only asked State governments to identify the illegal immigrants and initiate action as per the established procedure.
 
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The missionaries should be made active there. Christianise, then secularise.
 
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What is Modi doing since 3+ years?
Ruling by fooling?

Before elections of 2014, his paid twitter army trolled Congress with inflatable numbers of Illegal Bangladeshis and wanted some had questions to be answered as to why they were not deported.

Modi has 3+ years (active) tenure, yet not a single BD got deported:

jaiho.png
 
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CHAKMAREFUGEECAMPTRIPURA


File photo of women weaving at a Chakma refugee camp in Southern Tripura. | Photo Credit: The Hindu Photo Library

http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...ng-refugees/article19675921.ece?homepage=true
New Delhi, September 13, 2017 15:35 IST
Updated: September 13, 2017 15:45 IST

The Union Home Ministry on Wednesday cleared the citizenship for over one lakh Chakma-Hajongs, Buddhists, and Hindus, who fled to India in the 1960s to escape religious persecution in Chittagong Hill area of Bangladesh (the then undivided Pakistan).

The decision was taken in a meeting chaired by Home Minister Rajnath Singh. National Security Advisor (NSA) Ajit Doval, MoS Home Affairs Kiren Rijiju, and Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Pema Khandu were also present in the meeting.

Emerging from the meeting, Mr. Rijiju said, "Supreme Court order has to be honoured. Chakmas are settled in Arunachal Pradesh since 1964. But Scheduled Tribe status and indigenous people's right won't be diluted."

In 2015, the top court had asked the Centre to grant citizenship to Chakma-Hajongs. Arunachal Pradesh government had earlier opposed the move and had said it would change the demography of the State.

A senior Home Ministry official said they would be granted citizenship but will not have any land ownership rights in Arunachal Pradesh, a predominantly tribal State.
 
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http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/chakma-hajong-issue-still-open/article19678071.ece

Kiren Rijiju says Centre will find a middle ground while granting them citizenship
Union Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju said here on Wednesday that as per the Supreme Court’s order, the government would grant citizenship to over one lakh Chakma-Hajongs, Buddhists and Hindu refugees who came to India from the Chittagong Hill Area in undivided Pakistan in the 1960s.

However, Home Ministry spokesperson Ashok Prasad said the “matter is still under consideration”.

Mr. Rijiju told The Hindu that as per the constitutional provisions and various regulations, the Chakma-Hajongs “cannot be equated with the indigenous people of Arunachal Pradesh”. He blamed the Congress for committing a historical mistake.

The Chakma-Hajong refugee issue was discussed threadbare at a high-level meeting convened by Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh and attended by Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Pema Khandu, National Security Adviser Ajit Doval and Mr. Rijiju.

Addressing presspersons after the hour-long meeting, Mr. Rijiju said a “middle ground” would be chosen so the 2015 Supreme Court order to grant citizenship could be honoured and the rights of the local population would not be diluted.

“The Supreme Court order has to be honoured. Chakmas are settled in Arunachal Pradesh since 1964. But ST status and indigenous people’s rights won’t be diluted,” he said.

Several organisations and the civil society in Arunachal Pradesh have been opposing citizenship to the Chakma and Hajong refugees saying it would change the demography of the State.

Workable solution
The Central government is trying to find a workable solution by proposing that the refugees will not be given rights, including land ownership, enjoyed by the Scheduled Tribes in Arunachal Pradesh, an official said.

However, they may be given Inner Line permits required for non-local people in Arunachal Pradesh to travel and work. “We are trying to find a middle ground so that the Supreme Court order is honoured, the local people's rights are not infringed and the human rights of the Chakmas and Hajongs are protected,” he said.

The Minister said they have to file a reply on the issue in Supreme Court soon.

Chakmas and Hajongs were originally residents of the Chittagong Hill Tracts in erstwhile East Pakistan who left their homeland when it was submerged by the Kaptai dam project in the 1960s. The Chakmas, who are Buddhists, and Hajongs, who are Hindus, also allegedly faced religious persecution and entered India through the then Lushai Hills district of Assam (now Mizoram).
 
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http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...ng-refugees/article19715216.ece?homepage=true

Citizenship to them will disturb the “demography” of Arunachal Pradesh, says Union Minister Kiren Rijiju.

Days after saying that the Centre would honour the 2015 Supreme Court order on granting citizenship to the Chakma-Hajongs, Buddhists and Hindus from undivided Pakistan, Union Minister of State for Home Kiren Rijiju said on September 19 that the Supreme Court order was not implementable.

In an about turn, Mr. Rijiju said the two persecuted communities who came from Chittagong (now Bangladesh, then undivided Pakistan) were settled in Arunachal Pradesh between 1964-69 by the then Congress government and any citizenship to them will disturb the “demography” of the tribal State.

Mr. Rijiju said that the media had misrepresented his comments on the Chakma-Hajongs and that the Centre would appeal in the Supreme Court against its earlier 2015 direction to grant citizenship to them.

“Arunachal Pradesh enjoys special status as per Constitution. As a Member of Parliament from Arunachal, I have to stand by my people,” Mr. Rijiju said.
 
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Chakma-Hajongs creating problems, Tibetans peace-loving: Arunachal CM Pema Khandu

On October 6, when the Arunachal Pradesh BJP state executive meeting was held in Tawang, Chief Minister Pema Khandu had said the Tibetan refugee issue should not be mixed up with that of the Chakma and Hajong refugees.

http://indianexpress.com/article/in...eace-loving-arunachal-cm-pema-khandu-4896906/

One week after a student body organised a well-attended rally against the Arunachal Pradesh government’s decision to implement the Tibetan Rehabilitation Policy of 2014, Chief Minister Pema Khandu said that unlike Chakma and Hajong refugees who were creating law and order problems, the Tibetans peace-fully co-existed with the local people.

“Unlike other refugees like the Chakma and Hajongs who are seeking citizenship and other rights and creating law and order problems and their numbers are increasing, the Tibetans are peace-loving and law-abiding people and have been peacefully co-existing with locals. Their numbers too are decreasing,” Khandu said in the state assembly in Itanagar on Wednesday. “The policy will also help in drawing a border line which will protect the rights and interests of the tribal people,” he said.

Khandu’s statement came in response to a resolution moved by Bamang Felix of the ruling BJP asking the state government to implement the Tibetan Rehabilitation Policy only after due consultation with all stakeholders. The resolution also asked the state government to take steps to protect the territorial and other consequential rights of its tribal population as protected and guaranteed by the Constitution of India and other laws.

While Khandu’s BJP government had in August this year approved implementation of the policy, it sparked widespread protest across the state from various civil societies. The All Arunachal Pradesh Students’ Union (AAPSU) has been opposing the Tibetan Rehabilitation Policy since the UPA government had framed it on October 20, 2014. The newly-formed Students United Movement of All Arunachal (SUMAA) in a rally held in Itanagar on October 10 said the policy was “an infringement on the rights” of the indigenous tribal communities of the frontier state.

The policy seeks to provide basic facilities to Tibetans residing in 45 settlements in 10 states across the country. CM Khandu has informed the state assembly that while Arunachal Pradesh had three Tibetan settlements – at Tenzingaon (West Kameng district), Tezu (Lohit) and Miao (Changlang) with a population of 7,530, their number was decreasing. “The initial population of the Tibetans was more. But now it has decreased as most of the refugees have shifted to Western countries in search of jobs,” he said. The Tibetan settlement at Miao is the oldest and set up in 1962, while the Tezu and Tenzingaon settlements were set up in 1964) and 1972 respectively.

Tibetans don’t seek citizenship

On October 6, when the Arunachal Pradesh BJP state executive meeting was held in Tawang, Chief Minister Pema Khandu had said the Tibetan refugee issue should not be mixed up with that of the Chakma and Hajong refugees. “Tibetans are not demanding citizenship. Secondly, the basic facilities of water, electricity, roads, PDS supply are already extended to Tibetan refugee settlement camps in Arunachal Pradesh. It is the government of India that had decided to extend these facilities to all states wherever these refugees are settled through Tibetan Rehabilitation Policy,” Khandu had said.

He had earlier this month also made it clear that his government would consult all indigenous communities before actually implementing the Tibetan Rehabilitation Policy. “The policy will only be adopted in consultation with all indigenous communities and student bodies and any objectionable matters will be omitted or modified. The objectionable matters in TRP are the grant of land lease and govt jobs to Tibetan refugees,” he had said.
 
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NEW DELHI, November 13, 2017 21:42 IST
Updated: November 14, 2017 01:03 IST

http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...nath-on-citizenship-issue/article20393234.ece

Yechury, civil society activists raise concerns over records verification process
Assam Chief Minster Sarbananda Sonowal met Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh on Monday to apprise him of the ongoing work on updating the National Register of Citizens (NRC) in the State ahead of the Supreme Court-set deadline of December 31.

The NRC is supposed to help the State government identify illegal Bangladeshi migrants who allegedly entered the State after March 25, 1971, the cut off date for migrant settlers to be considered citizens.

However, civil society activists and minority organisations have pointed out that the process of citizenship verification is not flawless.

Stick to SC norms

Addressing a seminar in Delhi on the current political situation and the question of citizenship in Assam, CPI (M) General Secretary Sitaram Yechury urged the Assam government to strictly adhere to the Supreme Court guidelines to update the NRC and warned against dividing people for political mileage.

“The question of citizenship register or NRC was an issue on which the Supreme Court has given very definite guidelines. This is something that has to be adhered very scrupulously and there cannot be any deviation from these guidelines,” said Mr. Yechury.

Civil society activists also point out that a Gauhati High Court order, rendering identity papers authenticated by village panchayat officials invalid, has added to the confusion.

Unsettling verdict

While Mr. Yechury said the Supreme Court’s original guidelines accepted panchayat documents as legal documents, eminent scholar from Assam, Prof Hiren Gohain, said the High Court ruling has resulted in “widespread panic”.

“As many as 27 lakh women, most of them married, suddenly begin to feel insecure. There appears to be some uncertainty as whether they are to be regarded as suspect aliens or citizens whose citizenships claims are yet to be established,” said Prof Gohain.

The High Court order has been challenged in the Supreme Court and the top court is expected to give its verdict by November 22.

Professor Apurba Kumar Baruah, Academic Director of Institute of Social and Regional Development (ISCARD), and formerly with the School of Social Sciences at the Shillong-based North East Hill University said the activists and scholars did not want to influence the judicial process but pointed out the complexities that revolve around the issue of identity politics in Assam.

Academic-turned-politician Yogendra Yadav alleged that the ruling BJP was “trying to give a religious interpretation to the issue of citizenship” and urged people to closely follow the citizenship debate in Assam as it concerned the idea of India.

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March 01 11:57 2017

assam-map.jpg


According to 2001 census, the districts in Assam with larger Muslim population as compared to Hindus were Barpeta, Dhubri, Karimganj, Goalpara, Hailakandi, Nagaon, Bongaigaon Morigaon and Darrang.

As per the census, Dhubri district has 79.67%, Barpeta 70.74%, Darrang 64.34%, Hailakandi 60.31% , Goalpara 57.52%, Karimganj 56.36%, Nagaon 55.36%, Morigaon 52.56% and Bongaigaon 50.22% people of Islamic faith.
 
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