The Citizenship Amendment Bill has driven a wedge in Assamese society where residents of Barak Valley, dominated by Bengalis, have welcomed the move; whereas the inhabitants of Brahmaputra Valley who are mostly Assamese, do not want non-Assamese people to be accommodated in the National Register of Citizens of India
New Delhi: If the narrative in a section of the media is to be believed, the Citizenship Amendment Bill has driven a wedge in Assamese society where residents of Barak Valley, dominated by Bengalis, have welcomed the move; whereas the inhabitants of Brahmaputra Valley who are mostly Assamese, do not want non-Assamese people to be accommodated in the National Register of Citizens of India.
The premise of the Bill is that non-Muslims are persecuted in Islamic countries surrounding India. These Hindus, Sikhs, Christians, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis, etc flee countries like Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh and seek shelter in this country. On the other hand, Muslims are not expected to suffer persecution in nations formed on the basis of their religion. Ergo, the proposed law posts, if they enter India, the motive has to be the lookout for greener pastures.
In simpler words, their reason is a lookout for employment, which is economic. And this is a burden on the already stressed economy of India, which nationalists are not ready to bear with. The Bill, however, tries to stay somewhat politically correct by referring to Muslim infiltrators as "economic migrants". The salient features of the law the Narendra Modi government proposes follow.
The Act above is related to the National Register of Citizens for Assam as the Bill seeks to alter a part of the register. Whereas the NRC wouldn't accommodate any citizen who lacks the bona fides, the Bill would make an exception for those who are not Muslim.
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The threat to national security by infiltrators and settlers like Bangladeshis and Rohingyas is perhaps greater than the burden on the economy. The Citizenship (Amendment) Bill stops short of mentioning terrorism, though. The people of the country must now decide whether the BJP-led NDA government is being harsh on Muslim infiltrators or going soft on terrorism by shying away from mentioning this as the most urgent situation, not to speak of the other law-and-order issues created by the illegal immigrants, that necessitated the Bill.
With inputs from Surajit Dasgupta
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