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THE DREADED LIST OF ASSAM

Manik Das
In all, 1.57 lakh ‘D’ voters, according to official sources, are facing trial before the 36 Foreigners’ Tribunals. How has this ‘D’ voter issue cropped up? Anil Chandra Dey, President of Akhil Bharatiya Adhivakta Parishad, said that the door to door survey conducted by the election department of Assam Government in 1997 across the state to enlist the names of genuine Indian citizens was found to be full of anomalies.

Family members of shabdakars
What added a new dimension to the vexed problem was the judgement of honourable judge of Gauhati High Court, BK Sarma on the 4th of April, 2004 to the effect that those put on trial before the Foreigners’ Tribunal should be sent to detention camps till their cases were disposed of. The judgement was based on the fact that after identification, the Bangladeshis resorted to vanishing acts. Advocate Dey pointed out that there are only two detention camps in the state, one at Goalpara and the other at Kokrajhar. Around 148 ‘D’ voters till date have been lodged in jails due to lack of space in camps. He termed it quite inhuman to detain the voters along with the convicts in jails.

Anath Bandhu Biswas
The door to door survey conducted by the election department of Assam Government in 1997 across the state to enlist the names of genuine Indian citizens was found to be full of anomalies. |
Akhil Bharatiya Adhivakta Parishad, General Secretary, Santanu Naik, said it has now been decided after critically examining and reviewing the Foreigners’ Act of 1946 and the Immigrants (expulsion from Assam) Act of 1950 to file a PIL in the Supreme Court, seeking amendment of both the Acts so that the Hindu Bengalis of Assam are treated differently from the infiltrators, considering the circumstances, civil disturbances and religious persecution to which they have been subjected to besides being forced to leave their hearths and homes in their native land of East Pakistan, now Bangladesh.
He revealed that a PIL would be filed under article 32 of the Indian Constitution. The PIL would forcefully plea with the Apex Court to quash the ‘D’ voters circular issued by the Election Commission.
Interestingly, the State Government advocate who contested the PIL filed by Hafeez Rashid Chowdhury opposed any intervention of the High Court on the matter of ‘D’ voters, leave aside the protection for Hindu victims of police harassment. It only exposed the double standards of the Congress Government whose Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi had assured of humanitarian consideration for the Hindu Bengalis, being the victims of partition and subsequent repression in Bangladesh, pointed out Santanu Naik.
It is to be recalled here that the NDA Government amended the Constitution in 2004 to grant citizenship to Hindu migrants from Pakistan to Gujarat and Rajasthan who had to leave their native land under compulsions. The amendment could not be possible, clarified Naik, in respect of Assam as the IM(DT) Act of 1983 was in force which was quashed by the Supreme Court in response to a PIL filed by the then AGP leader Sarvananda Sanowal who is now with BJP. In the meantime, the BJP too has drafted a Citizenship Law Amendment Bill 2010 for introduction in the current session of the Parliament for granting citizenship to Hindu migrants to Assam. Once the PIL is filed before the Supreme Court and the Amendment Bill is passed in the Parliament, it is expected to bring relief to the Hindu ‘D’ voters.