About 2 million people remain stateless in Assam, India

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When the state of Assam started a massive exercise to register its citizens in 2015, Suro Devi, who at one year old was rescued from a dump did not have a birth certificate, information about her parents, a voter list with her name on it, or anything to prove that she had lived in Assam before March 25, 1971.

She seemed destined to be left off the National Register of Citizens (NRC) and become stateless, and perhaps spend the rest of her days in a detention camp.

But Zamser Ali, a citizenship rights activist based in Assam’s capital, Guwahati, heard about Devi’s case. He knew that documents were not the only thing that could prove your origins. He managed to track down five eyewitnesses to her rescue from the dump. And in August, when the draft NRC was published, Devi’s name appeared on it.

“You have to be creative in these situations,” says Ali, on his way to a small village to train two dozen men on how to defend their communities’ citizenship rights.

Ali leads the Assam chapter of the Citizens for Justice and Peace (CJP) organisation and is overseeing a huge effort to train more than 1,000 volunteer paralegals in the state.

In three months, they have certified about 200 people. The plan is for these volunteers to help the nearly 2 million people whose names were left off the NRC and who now face becoming stateless.

The register is aimed at stripping the citizenship of people whom authorities describe as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh. People have to prove that they or their family moved to Assam before March 1971, when neighbouring Bangladesh gained independence. Those who are left off the final list face going to detention camps or being deported.

Everyone has a chance to appeal the draft list, and Ali, a journalist turned activist, is leading the charge to help people do so.

He left journalism in 2018 to devote himself full-time to fighting the NRC. He speaks “10 or 11 languages”.

The training was almost cancelled after police pressured the principal of a school where the group was due to meet to back out. A farmer, recognising Ali from TV, offered his house instead.

“This is not without its challenges, but you can see how much the community supports us,” Ali says. The group gathers in the farmer’s small plywood home, situated between two vast paddy fields. They sit on beds and on the floor listening to Ali and Shaiz Uddin Ahmed, a defence lawyer at the Gauhati high court, who volunteers as a legal trainer for CJP.

CJP simplifies the legal procedures, evidentiary rules, and judicial precedents relevant to contesting citizenship.

In late November, the NRC authority is due to tell people why their names were not included, after which they will have exactly 120 days to provide evidence to the contrary.

“I think, out of the 1.9 million names omitted, not more than 800,000 are truly undocumented,” says Ali. Informal name and address changes, a loose grip on documents like birth certificates, illiteracy, and intimidation by local politicians are among the reasons why so many legitimate residents were left off the register.

CJP has an extensive and low-cost toolkit. Volunteers help people find old state voter lists or help them investigate where exactly their parents and grandparents lived. They petition local officials who block access to records. They help people find notaries to certify documents like their birth certificates.

Ahmed and about 30 other lawyers working with CJP have prepared hand outs for the paralegals on a number of legal topics, including the exact wording that should be used on written depositions.

There are already six detention camps in Assam for people deemed to be foreigners, as well as about 100 tribunals for people contesting their status. Eleven new detention camps are planned in the aftermath of the NRC exercise, and 200 more tribunals are expected to be set up.

The NRC has a distinct religious aspect under the current Hindu nationalist government. India’s home minister has promised a controversial citizenship amendment that would let undocumented “Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain and Christian settlers” stay, but not Muslims. A huge number of Hindus were left off the draft NRC.

Ali’s name appears on the draft NRC, but he notes that even he, with relatively many resources, needed seven years to gather the necessary paperwork.

“The real test will start next month, when the clock starts ticking on people’s cases,” he says as he leaves the village. He will hit the road again on Monday. “It’s very easy to lose hope, but that is why we have to work hard.” (Source: The Guardian)

 

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