Assam NRC was a statutory process: Indian foreign ministry
The Indian External Affairs Ministry today asserted that updating of the NRC in Assam was a statutory, transparent and legal process mandated by the Supreme Court, which is "non-discriminatory" and "leaves no room for bias and injustice".
The ministry also made it clear that people excluded from NRC would continue to get the rights or entitlements they have enjoyed so far.
In a long statement, the Ministry spokesman Raveesh Kumar said the NRC has no implication on the rights of an individual resident in Assam.
"For those who are not in the final list will not be detained and will continue to enjoy all the rights as before till they have exhausted all the remedies available under the law. It does not make the excluded person 'Stateless'."
"It also does not make him or her a "Foreigner" within the legal meaning of the term. They will not be deprived of any rights or entitlements which they have enjoyed before," the statement said.
It said the NRC updating "process is being monitored by the Supreme Court directly and the government is acting in accordance with the directives issued by the court. The apex court of the land has itself set the deadlines for all steps that have been taken so far."
Recalling that the government of India signed the Assam Accord in 1985 with the promise to take care of the interests of the citizens of Assam, the statement said the NRC aims to give effect to the Assam Accord between the government of India, government of Assam, the All Assam Students Union (AASU) and All Assam Gan Sangram Parishad (AAGSP). The Supreme Court of India mandated the government to deliver on the commitment in 2013, it added.
"Updating of NRC is a statutory, transparent, legal process mandated by the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India. This is not an executive-driven process. The process is being monitored by the Supreme Court directly and the government is acting in accordance with the directives issued by the court," according to the statement.
The MEA statement said "NRC is a fair process based on scientific methods. Inclusion in the NRC is a unique process, as it is based on "application" rather than "house-to-house enumeration". It means that any person in Assam could have sought to be included in the list on the basis of having documentation to prove lineage from an entitled person, i.e. a person who was a resident of Assam as on March 24, 1971."
"It is a non-discriminatory process, which leaves no room for bias and injustice. As can be seen from the application form for data entry in NRC, there was no column in the application asking for the religion of the applicant," the statement said.
The MEA said, "anyone excluded from the list at this stage has a right to file an appeal within 120 days of receiving a notification of exclusion to the designated Tribunal. All appeals and excluded cases will be examined by this Tribunal i.e. a judicial process. This judicial process will commence only after the appellate period is over. Thereafter, anyone still aggrieved by any decision of being excluded will have the right to approach the High Court of Assam and then the Supreme Court."
"The government of India will even assist in providing directions on how to deal with such appeals. Through the District Legal Service Authorities, the government has provisioned to extend legal aid to the needy. The State of Assam has assured provision of free legal assistance to any person excluded from the list and who is unable to afford such legal assistance. This is to enable people, especially the disadvantaged sections, to have access to the best possible legal assistance," the MEA said.
It said that to expedite the process of receiving applications for inclusion (in NRC), the state government is further adding 200 tribunals to the existing 100 tribunals. A further 200 more tribunals will be set up by the state of Assam by December 2019.
"India, as the world's largest democracy, has firmly enshrined 'equal rights for all' and 'respect for the rule of law' in its Constitution. An independent judiciary and fully autonomous state institutions, working for the defence of human rights, are an integral part of our political fabric and traditions. Any decision that is taken during the process of implementation of the NRC, will be within the four corners of the Indian law and consistent with India's democratic traditions," said the statement.
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