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Assam NRC - Sanaullah's Case

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June 10, 2019

What is the issue?

Upon the orders of the Gauhati High Court, Mohammad Sanaullah was recently released on bail from a detention camp in Assam.

What is the case about?

  • According to the Assam Accord, individuals who entered Assam after March 24, 1971 are illegal immigrants.
  • There are two parallel processes to establish citizenship:
    1. the Foreigners Tribunals operating under the Foreigners Act
    2. the National Register of Citizens (NRC), which is under preparation
  • These two processes are nominally and formally independent. But in practice, these two systems influence each other.
  • People who have been declared as foreigners by the Foreigners Tribunals, and even their families, were dropped from the draft NRC.
  • Mohammad Sanaullahhad been detained few days back after a Foreigners Tribunal had declared him an illegal immigrant.
  • It was learnt that Mr. Sanaullah had served for three decades in the Indian Army.
  • Following this, after a week of sustained public pressure, the Gauhati High Court’s bail order has come.

What are the procedural contentions?

  • In the intervening period of Sanaullah’s release, a shocking number of irregularities surfaced.
  • In its inquiry report, the Assam border police had written that Mr. Sanaullah was a ‘labourer’.
  • The three men who signed the case report claimed that the investigating officer had fabricated their signatures.
  • The investigating officer himself admitted that it might have been an “administrative mix-up”.
  • Yet, it was on the basis of such disputable material that the Foreigners Tribunal concluded that Mr. Sanaullah was a “foreigner”and sent him off to a detention camp.
  • [The Foreigners Tribunal is a quasi-judicial body expected to follow the rule of law.]

What is the larger issue?

  • Investigative journalists have revealed over the last few years that ‘administrative errors’ of this kind are the rule rather than the exception.
  • Sometimes, such disputable materials lead to people being detained for 10 years or more.
  • For these individuals, without the benefit of media scrutiny, there may be no bail; in other words, an endless detention.
  • In most cases, the legally mandated initial inquiry before an individual is brought before a tribunal as a suspected “foreigner” does not happen; it did not happen for Mr. Sanaullah.
  • Foreigners Tribunals themselves are only constrained by a very limited number of procedural safeguards.
  • This has led to situations where Tribunals have issued notices to entire families, instead of just the suspected “foreigner”.
  • Additionally, reports show that Foreigners Tribunals habitually declare individuals to be “foreigners” on the basis of clerical errors in documents.
  • These may include as small things as a spelling mistake, an inconsistency in age, and so on.
  • The hardest hit by such irregularities are the vulnerable and the marginalised, who have limited documentation at the best of time.
  • They are rarely in a position to correct errors across documents.
  • On occasion, orders determining citizenship have been passed by tribunals without even assigning reasons, a basic element of the rule of law.
  • In addition, a substantial number of individuals are sent to detention camps without being heard.
  • In detention centres families are separated, and people are not allowed to move beyond narrow confined spaces for years on end.
  • NRC and Judiciary - Driven by the Supreme Court, the NRC process has been defined by sealed covers and opaque proceedings.
  • The Supreme Court developed a new method of ascertaining citizenship known as the “family tree method”.
  • This method was not debated or scrutinised publicly, and it is found that people from the hinterland were unaware of the method.
  • Also, those who were aware had particular difficulties in putting together “family trees” of the kind that were required; the burden fell disproportionately upon women.
  • Recently, a process allowed for individuals to file “objections” against people whose names had appeared in the draft NRC.
  • On the basis of this, such people would be forced to once again prove their citizenship.
  • This had resulted in thousands of indiscriminate objections being filed, on a seemingly random basis, causing significant hardship and trauma to countless individuals.

What is the significance of Sanuallah’s case?

  • Citizenship issues are very elemental and important demanding careful implementation and necessary procedural safeguards.
  • This is especially true as the consequences of being declared a non-citizen are grave.
  • These may include disenfranchisement, exclusion from public services, incarceration in detention camps, statelessness, and deportation.
  • Ensuring rule of law in such cases is of utmost importance.
  • Given this, Mr. Sanuallah’s case has brought the citizenship issue in Assam to the centre stage.
  • It can prompt some urgent national introspection about a situation in which thousands of people languish in detention camps for years.
  • It must serve as an urgent call for rethinking the National Register of Citizens.

What lies before the judiciary?

  • In a process with such flaws, and where the consequences are so drastic, judiciary intervention is crucial.
  • It is expected to fulfil its role of being the guardian of fundamental rights and the guarantor of the rule of law.
  • In cases where the cost of error is so high, the supreme court should realize that it is not “speed” that matters, but the protection of rights.

 

Source: The Hindu

1 comments
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Faizan Ali 5 years

Sir please restart your daily editorials initiative

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