West Bengal must also maintain NRC: Prafulla Mahanta

IANS  |  New Delhi 

Former Chief Minister and AGP Mahanta on Wednesday said that should also maintain a National Register of Citizens (NRC) which should include the names of only Indian nationals and exclude those of illegal Bangladeshi infiltrators.

"In Bangladesh, everybody speaks Bengali as it is their national language, so those who infiltrate also speak Bengali," he said.

"It is easy for them to mix in and but in Assam, apart from the Barak valley, they get caught."

Expressing the hope that West Bengal will start the preparation for an NRC with the help of the central government, Mahanta said: "A at least at the secretary-level should be appointed at the If an is there, he cannot always draw the attention of ministers of the central government. But a can."

His comments come in the face of fierce opposition of to the final draft of the NRC that was released last month and in which as many as four million people did not find their names.

Mahanta was in the national capital leading a delegation of the AASM for a series of programmes opposing the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2016, that will virtually render the 1985 Assam Accord meaningless.

Since the Bill was introduced in Parliament in 2016, Mahanta's AGP, which was formed after the and which is now the junior partner in Assam's current ruling BJP alliance, has been vociferously opposing it.

The Bill seeks to grant citizenship rights to Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, Parsis and Christians from Bangladesh, and on the basis of religious persecution.

But, according to the Assam Accord, all foreigners who entered that northeastern state after March 24, 1971, should be detected and deported irrespective of religion.

"The Asom Andolan Sangrami Mancha has been from the very beginning opposing the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill 2016 because if this bill becomes a law, the indigenous people of Assam will become a minority and will lose their rights," Mahanta said.

He also said that the assuring the government that the NRC is an internal matter of and the eastern neighbour should not be worried about it cannot be accepted.

According to Al-hajj Sayed Nazi, a of a religious party allied to Bangladesh's ruling alliance, the has assured his country that the NRC is an internal matter of and there will be no deportations to

"All earlier governments as well as all parties have agreed that, according to the Assam Accord, all those Bangladeshis who have infiltrated into after March 24, 1971, should be deported," Mahanta said.

"The main reason for the Assam Accord going for 1971 was the Indira-Mujib pact and also because all national parties did not want to go beyond that."

Mahanta said that in 1980, when he was the of the that was spearheading the and was its General Secretary, they had submitted a memorandum to then clearly stating that the 1951 NRC of Assam should be updated.

"The NRC is the first step that will make the process of detecting foreigners easy," Mahanta said.

He said that promises were made by the current government at the Centre at the time of the 2014 that after 2016, all Bangladeshis will have to leave Assam for along with their belongings and that not an inch of Assam would be ceded to Bangladesh and the interests of Assam will be safeguarded.

"But none of these turned into reality on the ground. Instead, land of Assam was given to Bangladesh and steps have been taken through the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill to give permanent status to them (Bangladeshi infiltrators)," Mahanta said.

"So, we at the Asom Andolan Sangrami Mancha, are appealing to the central government not to turn this Bill into law and publish a correct NRC."

--IANS

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First Published: Wed, August 08 2018. 20:20 IST