North-East crisis needs principles legal framework and diplomacy, not the controversial legislation
Prameela K
Published on: 14 December 2019, 03:20 am
While most legal scholars have commented that the Citizenship (Amendment) Act on the violation of Article 14, the author focuses on the denial of due process of law leading to the declaration of been a" foreigner " and implication for them becoming stateless He argues that apart form being a constitutional issues, the solution lies in diplomatic understanding with Bangla Desh and other neighbours, pending which, all " foreigners" must be given full constitutional protection.
[dropcap]A[/dropcap]S our nation steadily treads a path of democratic success and economic strength, we can ill afford another minefield of human suffering in the battle between vested political interests. The illegal immigrant crisis in the northeast requires level-headed politico-legal attention rooted in our constitutional principles and international obligations, not the rhetorics of communal polarisation or creation of captive vote-bank. Also, since it is a cross-national human crisis, it requires skilful diplomacy to avoid human suffering and to ensure stability in the region.
The pertinent questions in the context do not relate to a presumption of either the absence or presence of illegal immigration of millions of people, howsoever much the electoral compulsions may accentuate them. National interest dictates that political actors on all sides eschew creating divides and fears for reaping political dividends. The recognition of the possibility of illegal immigration is the germinal measure on which the solution can be devised. Such a recognition occasions the most relevant questions that ought to be the focal point of any effort at a resolution of the issue – identification of illegal immigrants by India as well as their position in and treatment by the Indian polity.
Identification of illegal immigrants within a country entails the presence of a record of citizens, preferably on a real-time basis. The existing data framework in our country is inadequate to determine citizenship status with certainty. Census data is the most comprehensive demographic profile of the country but it fails to appraise indubitableness of citizenship. Neither the Registration of Births and Deaths Act, 1969 carries any implication of nationality of parents on registration of the birth of a child. National Population Register, a register of usual residents of the country, was the first attempt in 2010 at real-time maintenance of demographic data of the usual residents including the citizenship status. Since the de-duplication and updating of data are in progress, even NPR cannot reliably ascertain citizenship for now.
Thus in order to carry out the stipulations of Assam Accord, 1985 and mitigate the dissension due to illegal immigration, UPA 2 decided to carry out updating of NRC, which exists only for Assam, on a pilot basis in Kamrup and Barpeta districts in 2010. The exercise had to be abandoned due to ensuing disturbances and violence and was re-initiated only on the direction of the Hon'ble the Supreme Court of India in 2013. Though some squarely blame the Supreme Court for the ongoing crisis in Assam, the unrest caused by perceived or real undocumented immigration is a genuine concern that needs redressal. On the other hand, the avoidable unease among the bonafide Bengali speaking citizens needs to be redressed. It shall also help shift the political focus from the vote bank politics to the much needed developmental requirements of the region. The final list excluded1.9 million people from NRC, which though is appreciably below various estimates, presents a possibility of an acute humanitarian crisis.
The problem of the whole process of updating lay at two different levels. Firstly, NRC places the burden of proof of citizenship on the individuals, so there is a presumption of guilt which consequently vitiates the process on the grounds of justice and fairness. It thus imputes illegality, even criminality, on an entire population of over 3 crores. But a three-judge bench of the Supreme Court struck down down the provision of the burden of proof on state as enshrined in the Assam-specific Illegal Immigrants (Determination by Tribunals) Act,1983, as ultra-vires the Constitution and upheld the validity of the provision in Foreigners Act,1946 that placed the burden of proof on individual citizens.