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In Quest For Citizenship, Assam Braves Rampaging Floodwaters With Hope And A Prayer

In a bid to prove their Indian citizenship, families in Assam, ravaged by floods, are dearly holding onto certain documents to prove their genuineness

In Quest For Citizenship, Assam Braves Rampaging Floodwaters With Hope And A Prayer
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As floodwaters swirled around him in mid-July, Habibur Rahman and his family of six  scrambled to save their bel­ongings in Assam바카라s Alikakh char, a sand bar on the Brahmaputra about 70km from state capital Guwahati. Their main worry was a few pieces of documents바카라brownish, the edges slightly frayed. Rahman wrapped them tightly in plastic to keep the paper dry, in case the water rose further. These pap­ers바카라land documents in the name of his father and grandfather바카라will det­ermine his fate and that of his family in a few weeks from now when the much-awaited and upd­ated national register of citizens (NRC) is published.

This Tuesday, the Supreme Court ext­ended the deadline for publication of the final NRC till August 31, but that is unlikely to provide any succour to people like the Rahmans바카라 wife Aklima Khatun and sons Nur Alam, seven, and Faridul, five바카라who found their names struck off the citizenship document last year. Ironically, the names of their two daughters바카라Samira Begum, 14, and Shahida Khatun, 11바카라have been inc­luded. The procedural flaws have bro­ught the NRC update under the scanner but officials maintain that all 바카라genuine Indian citizens바카라 will be included.

Last year, an estimated 40 lakh people out of 3.29 crore applicants were left out of the final NRC draft. A second list published on June 26 this year saw the names of another 1.02 lakh people off the roster for allegedly failing to prove their citizenship. The Rahmans have filed petitions reclaiming their Indian citizenship, resubmitted documents and attended as many as six hearings at different NRC centres in different districts. It may not be enough yet for the family. 바카라Now, it바카라s only hope. We are just hoping and praying that our names are included in the list,바카라 Habibur, 39, tells Outlook in his one-room house. 바카라Floods have damaged our house partly...and now the biggest tension is the NRC,바카라 he adds. Another daughter, now three, was born after the NRC process started.

Across Assam, where vast swathes of land are facing the annual scourge of heavy flooding, there are many like Rahman battling nature바카라s fury with NRC on their minds. There are mixed feelings over the mammoth exercise, first envisaged in the 1985 Assam Accord that marked the culmination of the six-year-long anti-foreigner movement in the state.

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People at an NGO-run NRC help-desk.

Photograph by Sandipan Chatterjee

Human rights activists and opposition parties see the NRC update as an alleged attempt by the BJP-led government at the Centre and the state to target the Muslim community. The government says the exercise will help it identify und­­­o­­cumented migrants and facilitate their possible deportation later.

While extending the deadline by a month, the top court, however, turned down 바카라fervent바카라 pleas by both the Centre and state for 바카라sample reverification바카라 of some names inc­luded in and excluded from the draft NRC. The petitions said that sample reverification had become necessary to quell 바카라growing perception바카라 that lakhs of 바카라illegal immigrants바카라 may have infiltrated the list, especially in districts bordering Bangladesh. Rights activists had earlier expressed apprehension that the plea for 바카라reverification바카라 was aimed at systematically striking out names of Muslims.

For many in the state, however, the NRC is the 바카라best available means바카라 to end a longstanding impasse over ill­egal migration, especially from Bangladesh, an issue that had dominated headlines in Assam for decades and div­ided society along religious and linguistic lines. Rajibul Islam, a businessman from Barpeta, for one, is hopeful that the final NRC draft will end the harassment and racial taunts his community members have faced for long. 바카라Many a time, bec­ause of the dress we wear or the beards some keep, we had to face derogatory rem­arks. Many would abuse us as Bangladeshi or Miya. I hope once the final NRC list is published, we can live here with dignity,바카라 says Islam, whose family has been inc­luded in the draft NRC.

After the NRC is published, the people who do not find their names on the list will have the option of approaching a foreigners tribunal바카라a quasi-judicial agency exclusive to Assam바카라the high court and finally the Supreme Court to prove their citizenship. Though the Centre has maintained that the 바카라illegal immigrants바카라 have to leave India, it is still unclear how or where the government will deport these people. Bangla­desh denies any 바카라large-scale migration바카라 to India.

As of now, Assam has six detention centres which are home to around 1,000 people who have been declared illegal citizens by the courts, besides some Bangladeshi and Myanmarese nationals who have been arrested for entering India without valid travel documents or for overstaying the visa.

Some people, who are waiting for the final date of publication of the NRC list, fear that they will be sent to a detention centre.  For Sakila Khatun, whose name along with her two sons is missing from the draft NRC, the only hope in her life is to see their names on the final list. 바카라I have no dream, I don바카라t need anything바카라just that our names are in the list...then I will be the happiest person,바카라 Sakila says. 바카라We are uneducated and poor people, so everyone tries to take advantage of our helplessness. I was told that my name was tagged as D (doubtful) so I will not be able to get a health card. But I have no regret. I don바카라t need anything but the names on the list,바카라 she adds. Sakila says advocates and other government officials would ask for money every time they go for some work.

바카라We can바카라t meet their demands. Even an affidavit costs around Rs 5,000. So, we need to send our kids to work in Guwahati or other places so that they can earn some money and pay for these expenses,바카라 she says, adding that son Shahadat Ali, who is barely 15, is working in a construction site in the state바카라s capital city .

The Bharatiya Gorkha Parisangha, an association representing the Nepalese community, suggested that the home ministry and Election Commission should adopt a mechanism to solve the doubtful voters바카라 issue for a fair NRC. The national secretary of the org­anisation, Nanda Kirati Dewan, says that Manju Devi, the great granddaughter of freedom figh­ter Chabilal Upadhyay, the foun­der of the Congress in Assam, has also been left out from the NRC draft despite having proven her parental lineage. 바카라She was told during the last draft that she had been marked D in 2005 so her NRC claim has been rej­ected along with her sons and daughters,바카라 he says, adding that even the name of Sahitya Akademi awardee and president of Assam Nepali Sahitya Sabha, Durga Khatiwada, was struck off the NRC draft last month. 바카라Khatiwada holds the 1951 NRC of his father as legacy. Although all his family members바카라 names have been included, he himself is surprised about his exclusion. These are the issues which needed proper att­ention,바카라 says Nanda.

Back in Alikakh char, Habibur and his family members are now perched on an embankment after floodwaters submerged everything around them from the second week of July. When they were darting from their house to a temporary flood shelter, it바카라s the official documents which were the first to be packed. 바카라We try to keep these safe. See, even after having these papers and documents we have been kept out of the list. Can you imagine what would have been our plight without these papers?바카라 asks Habibur, a farm hand.

For many in Assam, a few pieces of paper are worth their weight in gold. Like priceless family heirloom that can never be parted with.

By Abdul Gani in Chhaygaon (Kamrup)

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