Wednesday, July 16, 2025
spot_img

US govt entity expresses concern over NRC

Date:

Share post:

spot_imgspot_img

‘1.9 million Assam residents may soon be deemed stateless’

Washington: Expressing concern over the NRC exercise in Assam, an independent, bipartisan US government entity has said that close to two million long-time residents of the Indian state may soon be deemed stateless and alleged that they are being stripped of their citizenship ‘without a fair, transparent, and well-regulated’ process.
In a report on the religious freedom implications of the National Register of Citizens (NRC), the United States Commission for International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) has noted that 1.9 million names of residents of Assam have been left off the updated list and expressed concerns about how the exercise is being used to target and disenfranchise the Muslim population.
The NRC is a register containing names of all genuine Indian citizens.The process to update the register in Assam began following a Supreme Court order in 2013, with the state’s nearly 33 million people having to prove that they were Indian nationals prior to March 24, 1971. The updated final NRC was released on August 31, with over 1.9 million applicants failing to make it to the list. “Close to two million long-time residents of Assam may soon be deemed stateless. They are being stripped of their citizenship without a fair, transparent, and well-regulated NRC process,” USCIRF commissioner Anurima Bhargava said on Tuesday. “Worse yet is that Indian political officials have repeatedly conveyed their intent to direct and use the NRC process to isolate and push out Muslims in Assam. And now, across India, political leaders are seeking to expand the NRC and implement different citizenship standards for Muslims altogether,” said Bhargava, who testified before a congressional commission on the issue last week. USCIRF chair Tony Perkins said the updated NRC and subsequent actions of the Indian government are essentially creating “a religious test for citizenship” to target the vulnerable Muslim community, and urged the Indian government to protect the rights of all of its religious minorities as enshrined in the Constitution. In its 2019 Annual Report, the USCIRF classified India as a “Tier 2” country for engaging in or tolerating religious freedom violations that meet at least one of the elements of the “systematic, ongoing, egregious” standard for designation as a “country of particular concern,” or CPC, under the International Religious Freedom Act.
The India chapter of the report expressed concern that the NRC is “an intentional effort to discriminate and/or has the effect of discriminating against Muslims.” Assam has seen a huge influx from other places, particularly Bangladesh, since the early 20th century. It did not stop even after Independence, with a large number of illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, both Hindus and Muslims, settling there. Updating of NRC is a statutory, transparent, legal process mandated by the Supreme Court of India. (PTI)

spot_imgspot_img

Related articles

Jokes on disabled violate right to dignity, says SC ahead of laying guidelines to rein in stand-ups

New Delhi, July 15:  Insensitive jokes mocking disabled people violate their right to dignity, the Supreme Court said...

An archeological heritage, Satyajit Ray’s family home set for demolition in Bangladesh

Dhaka, July 15:  In yet another shocking development showcasing the growing social intolerance in Bangladesh, the ancestral home...

On bail: How Rahul Gandhi’s political punchlines keep landing him in courtrooms

New Delhi, July 15: Leader of the Opposition (LoP) in Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi has spent much of...

Shubhanshu Shukla: India’s new star

New Delhi, July 15: About 41 years after Rakesh Sharma's flight in 1984, India sent an astronaut into...