AASU move to remove aliens from Assam

AASU move to remove aliens from Assam

All Assam Student’s Union spent the New Year’s eve on December 31 in a unique way.

Three lakh objections have been filed in the claims and objections process of update of National Register of Citizens (NRC) in Assam, the last few hours before the Supreme Court’s Monday deadline ended at midnight.

However, till Sunday, only 600 objections had been filed.

Sources said the three lakh objections were filed by people mobilised by the All Assam Students’ Union (AASU) and 30 other organisations representing various ethnic communities after 5pm at the district headquarters. By then, most of the NRC Seva Kendras had closed.

AASU general secretary Lurinjyoti Gogoi said, “Around three lakh objections were filed on Monday evening. Approximating five persons per form, the total number of affected people will be around 15 lakh. The objections were filed by the people, helped by AASU and the other organisations.”

Official sources said the number of objections counted till Tuesday evening was 2.6 lakh. “Counting is on and it may go up by 10 per cent,” an official said.

The complete draft NRC published on July 30, 2018, had the names of 2.89 crore out of 3.29 crore applicants.

Objection is a process where someone can protest against the inclusion of the name of a person who he thinks is not a citizen of India in the NRC. The highest number of objections, over 70,000, was filed in Barpeta district, where the pilot project for the update was launched in 2010 but was suspended in July that year following a violent protest against the modalities for the update.

Barpeta additional deputy commissioner Pulak Patgiri said only 35 objections had been filed till December 30 but it swelled to over 70,000 before the deadline ended on December 31. There were over 19 lakh applicants in Barpeta district of which 2.7 lakh were excluded from the final draft list.

Sources said the AASU and the 30 organisations had been preparing for long to file the objections. Their members and supporters from across the state had provided them information about doubtful citizens against whom objections could be filed.

“Objections were filed against those who came to Assam in the recent past and set up villages and against those who seemed doubtful citizens. Inputs were taken from people living near them. The members of all these organisations had gone through the details before filing the objections,” a source said.

The source said most of the objections were filed in lower Assam districts.

The members of the organisations had discussed the issue threadbare in several rounds of meeting. Then AASU appealed to the Supreme Court to allow people to file objections in the district headquarters, arguing that filing objections in the NSKs involved risk to those who wanted to file objections. The court had accepted AASU’s appeal.

The number of claimants reached 31.2 lakh till end of the process on Monday from 30 lakh till Sunday, that is, over one lakh people filed claims on the final day, a day described as “hectic” by NSK staff, according to local newspaper reports.