Madhubala Mandal has trouble sleeping. Every time she closes her eyes, all she can see is a dark, dinghy cell and long, lonely nights spent searching for an ansÂwer to the biggest question of her life: 바카라Who am I바카라? Madhubala, 59, was relÂeased from a detention centre in Assam recently, nearly three years Âafter she was picked up from her village in Chirang district on suspicion of being a foreigner. And the pain just refuses to go. 바카라The government has ruined my life. I was kept in the detÂention centre for three years wrongly. Who will compensate that time? I have lost my eyesight. I can바카라t eat properly and I can바카라t even stand for five minutes. The nightmares don바카라t let me sleep,바카라 Mandal tells Outlook at her residence in west Assam바카라s No. 1 Bishnupur village, about 150 km west of state capital Guwahati.
Madhubala바카라s story is not an exception, though. As Assam sets about to update an official document바카라the National Register of Citizens (NRC)바카라to weed out all those suspected of being undocumented migrants, tales like that of Madhubala have multiplied. Like that of a former army officer who was also sent to a detention centre before the authorities realised their mistake. Or that of a centurion who was wrongly detained for weeks. Madhubala바카라s arrest was also found to a case of mistaken identity바카라the police were looking for a woman named Madhubala Das, who, incidentally, died many years ago in the same village.
The drive to update the NRC바카라now monitored by the Supreme Court바카라is the offshoot of a six-year-long mass movement against illegal infiltration, mainly from Bangladesh. As per the Assam Accord, signed in 1985, anyone who has entered the state after March 25, 1971, is considered illegal and will be detected and deported. The final draft of the NRC published on July 30 last year saw more than 40 lakh people left out from 3.29 crore applicants. An additional list published on June 26 saw another 1.02 lakh out of the NRC. The final NRC list will be out on July 31.
However, the NRC update process as well as the functioning of the so-called foreigners tribunals바카라though the two are not related바카라have been controversial for what many term as 바카라inherent flaws바카라. The border police unit of Assam Police바카라tasked with detecting foreigners have also come under the cloud after several instances of wrongful detentions. For the record, the names of Madhubala, her daughter and granddaughter바카라s names were included in the draft NRC while she was in the deteÂntion camp. Assam has six detention camps where about 1,000 people suspected of being foreigners are lodged.
바카라The detention of Madhubala was inhÂerently unconstitutional. Her entire family has fallen apart. The government should acknowledge the mistake and duly compensate her,바카라 human rights activist and advocate Aman Wadud tells Outlook. 바카라Madhubala has to fight for her right, she can file a civil suit for compensation, or can also approach the high court. Considering her condition, it won바카라t be easy for her to fight the might of the government,바카라 he adds. Madhubala, a daily wage labourer before her detention, had lost her husband and son.
Activists point to similar cases of wrongful detention of people most of whom are financially weak and illiterate. Then there are some others, well-known in the state. Like Sahitya Akademi awardee and president of Assam Nepali Sahitya Sabha, Durga Khatiwada, who found his name on the exclusion list released by NRC last week. His family members are, however, included in the NRC list.
Also left out is Manju Devi, the great granddaughter of freedom fighter Chabilal Upadhyay, one of the founders of the Congress in Assam.
A few months ago, Indian Army veteran Mohammad Sana Ullah was sent to a detention centre after a foreigners tribunal announced that he is an illegal migrant. Sana Ullah, who retired from the army in 2017 as an honorary captain, also worked with border police. He was released on bail after his family approached the Gauhati high court. Later, it was found that when the notice was issued in 2008, Sana Ullah was posted in Manipur and he never received it. The report submitted by the investigating officer had the thumb impression of a Sana UllahÂ바카라but the man under investigation was a daily wage labourer. The investigating officer also said that the army man was not the man he probed.
In other instances, too, the accused people didn바카라t receive the notices for which they failed to appear in court. The court then passes an ex-parte judgment against them. Like in the case of 102-year-old Chandradhar Das and Moinal Mollah. Das was released on bail from the Silchar detention centre due to his poor health conditions and Mollah spent three years before coming out of detention in 2017.
The government says it has taken the issue of wrongful detentions seriously and will ensure a foolproof system. 바카라The special DG of border police has been asked to enquire and to take all measures to probe that the process is transparent and foolproof in this regard. The government is trying everything so that no genuine citizen is harassed,바카라 says Ashutosh Agnihotri, commissioner and secretary of Assam바카라s home and political department.
Back in Bishnupur, Madhubala is distraught. With a physically-challenged daughter and 12-year-old granddaughter to feed, she says her battle has only just begun. 바카라My eyesight has gone바카라Š how will I find work?바카라 Madhubala says. All these years, her daughter and granddaughter stayed with her younger brother Mono Mandal, also a labourer. 바카라I바카라m an Indian citizen. I was born here and I want to die here. And in spite of that I was harassed. I appeal to the government now to look after me and my daughter,바카라 she pleads.
By Abdul Gani in Bijni