After India recently amended its laws
regarding citizenship, Nepalis living in Northeast India are terrified.
Both of India’s Upper and Lower Houses of Parliament passed the Citizenship Amendment Bill (CAB) which tightens laws regarding citizenship.
Assam’s
National Register of Citizens (NRC), published on 31 August 2019,
generated protests all over India because it was missing 1.9 million
residents. About 100,000 Nepalis, whose ancestors have been living in
the northeast Indian state for up to 200 years, were among those
excluded from the list for technical reasons like marriage, migration,
differences in last name, mistakes or lost documents. They are now
terrified that they will not be counted as Indian citizens. They are
listed as ‘D Voters’ meaning ‘Doubtful’ Voters.
In November, Indian Home Minister Amit Shah declared in parliament
that the list would be expanded over the entire country, and his ruling
BJP appears determined to implement NRC countrywide. It has amended the
constitution and got CAB passed by both Houses which will make it easier
to implement the NRC, which will ultimately affect the status of Indians of Nepali origin at present and future.
Since
1951, Assam has been the only Indian state to have created and updated
its register of citizens. The NRC is said to be an attempt to discover
‘foreigners’ residing illegally in the state. The concept of the NRC
came up in 1951, after India became independent and held its first
census. Its purpose later was to differentiate between Assam natives and
Bangladeshi refugees.
During British rule, many people from
Bihar, Bengal and Nepal migrated to Assam to work on its tea estates and
settle on empty land. After Partition and the breakup of Pakistan there
was a large influx of as many as 1 million refugees from Bangladesh,
first due to the language struggle and crackdowns by the Pakistan Army
in 1971. After Bangladesh became independent some returned home, but
many stayed on in Assam.
The Citizenship Amendment Bill makes it easier to implement the NRC
across the country. Opposition parties are protesting strongly against
it, and a dozen people have been killed in violent demonstrations across the country.
The Indian National Congress and the Mamata Banerjee-led All India
Trinamool Congress and the Marxist Communist Party are spearheading the
protests, but many of the student demonstrations in universities have
been spontaneous.
Protestors claim the bill undermines India’s
democratic system and secularism. CAB has provisions to provide
citizenship to Hindu, Christian, Sikh, Persian, Jain and Buddhist
refugees who have fled persecution in the neighbouring countries of
Pakistan, Afghanistan and Bangladesh, but denies Muslims the same facility.
Many also fear that the bill endangers the identity, language and
culture of the natives of Assam and neighbouring state, Tripura.
Mamata
Banerjee, chief minister of West Bengal, has already declared that she
will not let the NRC be implemented in West Bengal. People in northeast
states including Assam, Tripura, Sikkim and Darjeeling, have held many
protests against the bill.
Arunachal Pradesh, Mizoram and
Nagaland in Northeast India are exempted from the bill because they are
restricted states, where even Indian visitors need permits to enter.
That ‘Innerline Permit’ will also be implemented in Manipur eventually.
But Sikkim falls under the new law, which has created confusion.
Sikkim was a sovereign country until 1975, becoming India’s
22nd state after annexation in 1975. Sikkim Chief Minister PS Gole has
declared that the CAB and NRC will not be implemented in the state.
Supported by Sikkim’s opposition parties, he has requested the Indian
government to also exempt Sikkim.
In Darjeeling, the Vinay Tamang
and Anit Thapa-led Gorkha Janamukti Morcha (GJM), and the Dr
Harkabahadur Chhetri-led Jana Andolan party have opposed the CAB, but
the Gorkha Rashtriya Mukti Morcha and another faction of the GJM support
both CAB and NRC.
When he presented the CAB in parliament, Home
Minister Shah claimed that all those who were excluded from Assam’s NRC
were infiltrators, not Indian citizens. The GJM’s Tamang issued a press
statement refuting that allegation, and demanded that before the NRC is
implemented Indian Nepalis should be included in the list of ‘Original
Inhabitants of India’ and be a protected community.
Nepalis have been living in Indian states like Darjeeling and Assam
for more than 200 years, working on tea estates and farms. In fact,
Nepali speakers are better settled in northeast India than many Bengali
speakers, but many of the Nepalis do not yet have land deeds and it will
be even more difficult for them to get the rights if the NRC is
implemented.
The 1950 Nepal-India treaty gave Nepali and Indian
citizens the right to freely come and go in each other’s countries,
although India requires visas from Bangladeshis and Pakistanis. The
issue of the identity of Indians of Nepali origin has fuelled an
agitation for autonomy in the Darjeeling hills for many years. Subhas
Ghising proposed that they be called ‘Gorkha’ to differentiate them from
Nepali citizens. But this is not legally, or widely, accepted. There
are no Nepali refugees in India.
During the election campaign,
Home Minister Shah assured people that the NRC would not affect
‘Gorkhas’. But they are still confused regarding citizenship bill and
register. The Nepalis of Assam, where the NRC has been implemented, are
especially concerned about how to be counted as Indian citizens.
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