Tuesday, Apr 16, 2024 | Last Update : 03:01 PM IST

  Opinion   Edit  01 Sep 2020  AA Edit | Trouble for NRC "rejects"

AA Edit | Trouble for NRC "rejects"

THE ASIAN AGE.
Published : Sep 1, 2020, 5:16 pm IST
Updated : Sep 1, 2020, 5:16 pm IST

Citizenship is the primary identity of a person, and its denial, rightly or wrongly, compromises the very right to life

The very process of preparing the NRC was riddled with serious issues. Representational Image
 The very process of preparing the NRC was riddled with serious issues. Representational Image

The stalemate in the process of preparing the Supreme Court-mandated National Register of Citizens in Assam has put the lives of 19 lakh-odd people who were excluded from it in serious trouble. The process mandates that each excluded person should be issued a rejection slip which can be challenged in the Foreigners Tribunal, empowered to declare a person non-citizen.

The failure to issue the slips has stalled the entire process. As a result, those affected face difficulties in matters of their normal life such as finding a job, getting married, going on a foreign tour and contesting polls.

The government blames it on Covid-19, which made most government departments other than those involved in the containment of the pandemic non-functional for months on end.

The very process of preparing the NRC was riddled with serious issues. It was at first perceived as an attempt to exclude Muslims who had migrated to Assam from other parts of the country. Serious discrepancies such as members of the same family getting different status were reported as soon as the list was published.

The BJP, which had all along called it a tool to ‘eliminate infiltrators’ changed its stand after discovering that a third of those excluded were Hindus. The party’s Assam unit called for the verification of the list but it looks next to impossible after reports said the basic data of the NRC has been lost.

Citizenship is the primary identity of a person, and its denial, rightly or wrongly, compromises the very right to life. No government has the right to keep a decision on it pending for long.

The government must admit that it had not thought through the process and hence the present mess. It must either cancel the entire exercise or fast-track it. This is not an issue for which it can blame an act of god.

Tags: nrc final list