1.9
million people in Assam in north-east India
face
the threat of statelessness and detention after they were excluded
from an official list designed to dermine who was an illegal
immigrant and who was not. Anyone excluded from the final list has
120 days to appeal against the decision through a foreigners
tribunal, but campaigners say these bodies are vulnerable to
political pressures and have produced arbitrary judgments.
Teesta
Setalvad, the secretary of Citizens for Justice and Peace, a group
that is supporting affected communities, said the tribunals should be
made more transparent, and that a more realistic deadline for appeals
is needed.
“It
is a nightmare. I cannot even think of how it is going to be
possible,” she said.“If the authorities are serious about a
proper and fair process they should not hold the threat of a
time-bound process over the heads of poor and unlettered people.”
Amnesty
International said it was unrealistic to expect people from the
poorest communities, who may have been internally displaced by
violence or natural disasters, to preserve half a century-old
records.
The
process is also weighed against women, campaigners said, because they
often lack access to necessary documents, and because the ones they
do have are incorrectly given less weight by authorities.
Eligibility
Criteria was set as:
>>
Persons whose names appear in NRC, 1972
>>
Persons whose names appear in any of the Electoral Rolls up to 24
March (midnight), 1971.
>>
Descendants of the above persons.
>>
Persons who came to Assam on or after 1 January 1966 but before 25
March 1971 and registered themselves in accordance with the rules
made by the Central Government with the Foreigners Registration
Regional Officer (FRRO) and who have not been declared as illegal
migrants or foreigners by the competent authority.
>>
People who are original inhabitants of Assam and their children and
descendants who are citizens of India provided their citizenship is
ascertained beyond a reasonable doubt by the registering authority.
>>
‘D’ voters can apply for inclusion of their names in the updated
NRC. However, their names will be finally included only when the
appropriate Foreigner Tribunal declares them as non-foreigners.
>>
Persons who can provide any one of the documents issued up to
midnight of 24 March 1971 as mentioned in the list of documents
admissible for citizenship.
>>All Indian Citizens including their children and descendants who have moved to Assam post 24 March 1971 would be eligible for inclusion in the updated NRC on adducing satisfactory proof of residence in any part of the country (outside Assam) as on 24 March 1971.
>>All Indian Citizens including their children and descendants who have moved to Assam post 24 March 1971 would be eligible for inclusion in the updated NRC on adducing satisfactory proof of residence in any part of the country (outside Assam) as on 24 March 1971.
>>
All members of the Tea Tribes shall be covered under ‘Original
inhabitants of Assam’ category provided for under Clause 3(3) of
the Schedule of The Citizenship (Registration of Citizens and Issue
of National Identity Cards) Rules, 2003.
>> All such original inhabitants shall be included on the basis of proof to the satisfaction of the Registering Authority. On the establishment of the citizenship of such persons beyond a reasonable doubt, their names shall be in the updated NRC.
In
a country where the Prime Minister himself can not produce his
university degree certificate how is it possible to bring out
documents from five decades back?
Aakar
Patel, the head of Amnesty International India, warned the state of
Assam is “on the brink of a crisis which would not only lead to a
loss of nationality and liberty of a large group of people but also
erosion of their basic rights”.
Assam
has six detention camps that operate out of make-shift facilities in
local prisons in Goalpara, Dhibrugarh, Silchar, Tezpur, Jorhat and
Kokrajhar. The state is proposing to build 10 more detention centers
to hold the additional persons excluded from the NRC. No country is
going to absorb them. The lives of 1.9 million people lie in peril.
India should give them citizenship.
No comments:
Post a Comment