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Across country, stir NRC pot

Shah told the Rajya Sabha that all citizens of India irrespective of religion would figure in the NRC list

There is no provision in the NRC that people belonging to other religions will not be included in it, Amit Shah added. Telegraph file picture

Our Special Correspondent
Published 20.11.19, 09:01 PM

Union home minister Amit Shah seemed to suggest on Wednesday that a countrywide National Register of Citizens was a foregone conclusion, resurrecting a sensitive issue in the run-up to several localised but bellwether electoral battles.

“Jab NRC ki prakriya deshbhar mein hogi, usi wakt Assam mein bhi NRC ki prakriya swabhavik rup se phir se ki jayegi (When the NRC drive will be carried out across the country, the exercise will naturally be conducted afresh in Assam),” Shah told the Rajya Sabha on Wednesday.

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Shah almost passed off the proposed national exercise as a given but the statement was freighted with several political messages.

Shah sought to assure the country that the NRC would not discriminate on the basis of religion. But the discrimination question was more apparent on the Citizenship Bill, on which Shah did not signal any rethink.

Shah told the Rajya Sabha that all citizens of India irrespective of religion would figure in the NRC list.

Shah said the government would bring in the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill afresh as the previous one had lapsed on the expiry of the term of the 16th Lok Sabha.

When Trinamul MP Sukhendu Sekhar Roy pointed out that out of the 19 lakh people excluded from the NRC in Assam, around 11 lakh were Bengali Hindus, Shah reinforced the Centre’s stand that it accepts that Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, Christian, Sikh and Parsi refugees who left Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan because of religious persecution should get Indian citizenship.

“Although the majority of them (Assam residents) produced documents in support of their citizenship, they have been excluded. My question is: Will the government grant citizenship to all the genuinely affected Indians (left) out of the NRC without waiting for six years?” Roy asked.

In reply, Shah referred to people from the six faiths but made no mention of Muslims.

The original starred question on the NRC had been asked by Congress leader Syed Nasir Hussain, who wanted to know if the NRC provides for citizenship to immigrants of six non-Muslim faiths.

Hussain asked a supplementary question to seek a clarification on Shah’s statement in Calcutta that people belonging to non-Muslim faiths need not worry.

“The home minister, while speaking in Calcutta, had said that all those people, belonging to Hindu, Sikh, Christian, Jain and Buddhist communities, whose name is not there in the NRC, need not worry. I just want to ask the government and the home minister whether the NRC can give citizenship to any immigrant belonging to these communities, leaving out Muslims alone,” Hussain asked.

Shah replied: “The member has confusion about Citizenship (Amendment) Bill and NRC. There is no such provision under NRC to deny registration of citizens of any particular religion. It will include people of all religions who are citizens of India. There will be no discrimination under the NRC. The NRC and the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill are different processes.”

Amit Shah Mamata Banerjee Citizenship (Amendment) Bill National Register Of Citizens (NRC) Bengal
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