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The spectre of eviction that haunts Assam’s Bengali Muslims

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The spectre of eviction that haunts Assam’s Bengali Muslims
Suvojit Bagchi
March 25, 2017 16:30 IST
Updated: March 26, 2017 10:50 IST

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(Left to right) Musa Ali, father of Anjuma Khatun who was shot dead in Banderbudi; Sufiya, wife of Fakhruddin, who was killed by a stray bullet when he stepped out to see the eviction drive in Banderdubi; and Bimala Khatun, Fakhruddin’s mother, with their precious identification papers. | Photo Credit: Suvojit Bagchi


Assam’s Bengali Muslims guard with their lives yellowing documents that prove they are Indian. But it is not enough to keep at bay the constant spectre of eviction
A sudden gust of wind swept up a bunch of worn-out papers at Firoza Khatun’s makeshift house. As the papers flew about, it was a brittle, four-square-inch paper in a blue plastic folder that Khatun and her husband Hanif Ali seemed to care about the most. Firoza ran after the yellowing, leaf-like paper and, much like a child catching a sparrow, she carefully trapped it in her palms.

The tiny piece of paper is the original National Register of Citizens (NRC), 1951, document that was prepared on the basis of independent India’s first census. It has Hanif’s father Altaf Ali’s name written on it in blue ink. The document states that Ali’s ancestors migrated to Assam from erstwhile East Bengal before the Partition. The NRC is being updated again now, so Firoza and Hanif must guard this paper with dear life to establish that they are indeed Indian citizens.

Such ancient documents, often illegible, are possessed in prolific numbers by Assam’s Bangladeshi Muslim immigrant families. “We are obsessed with identity and with papers,” said Ali with a smile.

The anxiety to possess proof of identity has never been greater for this community. The updated NRC will include the descendants of all those who were included in the 1951 register. But a vast majority of these immigrants have been described as ‘doubtful citizens’, and before the 2016 elections in Assam, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had announced clearly that its key objective was to evict “doubtful citizens” from all government land and ensure the “complete sealing of the Indo-Bangladesh border.”

So, the yellowing piece of paper could not stop Ali’s family from being evicted last September from Deosursang village in Nagaon district. His family now lives in lean-tos in Chikunipathar, where a dozen families were huddled together in the winter cold when we visited early this year.

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In rhino land
In Banderdubi village, also on the edge of Kaziranga National Park and adjacent to Deosursang, Bimala Khatun’s son, 22-year-old Fakhruddin, stepped out of his hut to see the dozen excavators that had roared into his village. The excavators, escorted by nearly 2,000 policemen and at least a dozen elephants, had arrived to demolish the 200-odd houses made of tin and bamboo. As Fakhruddin stepped out, a stray bullet hit him in the neck. “I was cooking when I heard he was shot. I reached the spot in about five minutes, but he died almost instantaneously,” said Sufiya, his wife. When Bimala Khatun heard about her son’s death, her first thoughts were “about our identity papers,” she said.

Unofficial sources say that about 10,000 people have been evicted from roughly two dozen villages across Assam over the last six months. However, last month, the Assam government officially pegged the figure at 3,500.



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In the villages around Kaziranga, the official statement is that these villages fall inside the boundaries of Kaziranga National Park. But the families dispute this. According to Ali, in the mid-90s, around 100 families had been settled in Deosursang by the then Circle Officer. The families allege that the boundary of the national park has been arbitrarily pushed south by about 500 yards and fenced in to displace them. “The police said our village was in the animal corridor, but the adjacent village of Baghmari was not razed. Why are some villages being left and others destroyed,” asked Md. Nizamuddin, a 55-year-old small farmer. He claims it is because his is a Muslim village while Baghmari is an ethnically mixed village.

Banderdubi has seen another death. Anjuma Khatun, 19, was shot dead when “she stood between the bullet and the peasant leader Akhil Gogoi,” said Ashraful Hussain, 24, a social activist. Her death has already become legend in the region.

Gogoi is widely seen by the predominantly Muslim villagers as putting up the only resistance to the administration’s eviction efforts. Anjuma’s death has convinced the villagers of Banderdubi and of the chars (islands) and chaporis (banks) along the river that Gogoi could have stopped the eviction by contesting the elections.

Gogoi, 40, belongs to the Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti and was mentored initially by Anna Hazare. But he refused to contest the polls, emerging instead as an opponent to the administration’s large-scale eviction plans. He was arrested soon after he staged an agitation in Banderdubi. While in prison, Chief Minister Sarbananda Sonowal continued with the winter evictions. Gogoi was incarcerated for nearly three months. Eventually, a notice was issued to the Assam government by the National Human Rights Commission, but the evictions continued. “People must follow the law, and the State machinery must ensure maintenance of law and order so that all sections of society feel secure,” the Chief Minister said in the Assembly.

Assam’s latest eviction drama has no simple solution, as its roots lie in pre-independence India. It was in 1911 that the British Census Commissioners noted the migration from “overpopulated East Bengal” to the “labour-short, land-abundant Assam,” as mentioned by Assam’s foremost historian Amalendu Guha.

A year later, the Sylhet Division was carved out of Bengal and attached to Assam province. But the growth of the Muslim population proved threatening. “It was then that an open clash of interests began to take place,” wrote Guha in Planter Raj to Swaraj—Freedom Struggle and Electoral Politics in Assam 1826-1947. Eventually a ‘Line System’ was adopted in 1920 to settle immigrants in ‘segregated areas’ with 85% Muslims.



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A debate brewed within the Congress. In 1937, Jahawarlal Nehru argued that “from the point of view of developing Assam and making it wealthier… immigration (from East Bengal) is desirable.” It was challenged by the country’s first President, Rajendra Prasad, who believed in populating the Brahmaputra valley with “Hindus of Bihar than Muslims of Mymensingh.” After decades, the cut-off date to accept immigrants was marked as March 24, 1971, a couple of days before the start of the Liberation War in Bangladesh.

Soon after Independence, the Congress opted for a similar large-scale eviction of settlers. “The (Gopinath) Bordoloi government’s routine measures to evict thousands of immigrant squatters from grazing and forest reserves… looked like a counter-measure to curb the (Muslim) League,” wrote Guha. Bordoloi, however, “wisely decided to go slow with the policy and was able to keep the province (Nagaon) free from communal riots.”

This tradition to “go slow” continued until the BJP decided to reverse it now. Even though identifying individuals who arrived after March 24, 1971, is a complex exercise, large-scale eviction has started. A notification in January announced that “encroachment” on government land “shall be removed forthwith by the Deputy Commissioner”. It is this move that threatens to dispossess tens of thousands of people today.

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Cops in the schools
From a distance, Fuhuratoli, a village in Darrang district, looked like a large, unkempt graveyard. As we got closer, the dust mounds got bigger; they were the remains of what were once tin-roofed huts. On the vacant lot, six or seven girls were plucking yellow flowers from the grass. Their school, Fuhuratoli Primary, had been taken over.

“The police are staying there,” said Anisha Khatun, a Class IV student. Two fractured platoons of about two dozen central paramilitary forces were stationed in the school and in the madrassa to prevent villagers from resettling in Fuhuratoli. Before the eviction, Fuhuratoli had a little over 200 families living on a verdant highland that was about two sq. km in size. The greenery had now disappeared. A strong stench permeated the air in the new settlement lying in the lowland next to Nao river, a distributary of the Brahmaputra, with its polythene shanties that offered no protection against the biting cold. The villagers defecated in holes made on the banks of the Nao. A child had died of diarrhoea and cold, dozens were sick.

Khorshed Mollah is in his 70s. He said that he had moved house three times; living on the banks of the erratic Brahmaputra forces you to do so.

“In 1995,” said Mollah, “I was on the edge of the river in Ballakheti when the river took a turn and ate up our village; that’s when we came here. Now, after 22 years, we are described as encroachers,” said Mollah. The vagaries of the river seem to have been overlooked. Surveys suggest that erosion has created hundreds of new villages in the chars and chaporis, turning settlers to refugees or foreigners, depending on the day’s politics.



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This is a key problem. Some 4.27 lakh hectares (or 7.4%) of land has disappeared into the Brahmaputra since the 1950s, widening the river by around 15 km in some places. “The people who lose land to the river set up new villages in new places and are often identified as ‘illegal immigrants’ when they are actually victims of erosion,” said a senior bureaucrat.

The Assam government agreed to rehabilitate “erosion affected families” in an earlier notification but, curiously, added that the order will not extend to those affected by “other natural calamities or man-made disasters.”

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The cut-off date
The man instrumental in fast-tracking evictions insists that the papers the evicted villagers possess are not authentic. Supreme Court lawyer Upamanyu Hazarika launched Prabajan Virodhi Manch (Forum Against Infiltration) in 2013. He said that their papers are an act of “forgery”.

Hazarika also heads the one-man commission appointed by the apex court to look into the issue. He said that all the people were ‘encroachers’ who did not have land rights. “Otherwise, they would have got immediate protection from the court,” he said. “These people came in through a porous border and should go back the same way.” His forum, he said, is not attached to the BJP or the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh.

Their agendas appear to overlap but as far as Hazarika is concerned, even Bangladeshi Hindus must not be allowed into Assam. “Narendra Modi said that Assam would not take immigrants—so act on that pledge,” said Hazarika.

Vijay Kumar Gupta, a BJP general secretary in Assam, differed. “Any Hindu from Bangladesh or any other country is our citizen,” he said, but Bangladeshi Muslims are “foreigners”. He insisted that the Assam Accord’s 1971 cut-off date be respected. Interestingly, Bengali-origin Muslims also say that they accept this cut-off date.

Meanwhile, the evicted people have gotten together to create a platform demanding compensation and rehabilitation and have even managed to get some recompense. But the Rs. 5 lakh she got makes little sense to Sufiya, Fakhruddin’s wife. “They can take back the money and return my husband,” she said.

As for the others, they continue to cling to blue, purple and yellow files filled with brittle documents, even though they have provided little protection so far.
 
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These people have became victims of ethnic and religious identity politics.
“In 1995,” said Mollah, “I was on the edge of the river in Ballakheti when the river took a turn and ate up our village; that’s when we came here. Now, after 22 years, we are described as encroachers,” said Mollah. The vagaries of the river seem to have been overlooked. Surveys suggest that erosion has created hundreds of new villages in the chars and chaporis, turning settlers to refugees or foreigners, depending on the day’s politics.
This is a key problem. Some 4.27 lakh hectares (or 7.4%) of land has disappeared into the Brahmaputra since the 1950s, widening the river by around 15 km in some places. “The people who lose land to the river set up new villages in new places and are often identified as ‘illegal immigrants’ when they are actually victims of erosion,” said a senior bureaucrat.
Assam’s latest eviction drama has no simple solution, as its roots lie in pre-independence India. It was in 1911 that the British Census Commissioners noted the migration from “overpopulated East Bengal” to the “labour-short, land-abundant Assam,” as mentioned by Assam’s foremost historian Amalendu Guha.

A year later, the Sylhet Division was carved out of Bengal and attached to Assam province. But the growth of the Muslim population proved threatening. “It was then that an open clash of interests began to take place,” wrote Guha in Planter Raj to Swaraj—Freedom Struggle and Electoral Politics in Assam 1826-1947. Eventually a ‘Line System’ was adopted in 1920 to settle immigrants in ‘segregated areas’ with 85% Muslims.
 
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it takes a lot of arrogance to call yourself Islamic Republic and question the behavior of a secular state

Assam is Assam because it is inhabited by Assamese. If it was inhabited by Bengali Muslims it would be Bangladesh

First of all, there are only 3 Islamic republics in the entire world right now, Iran, Gambia and Pakistan, Bangladesh is not one of them. The fact that India always regards itself as a bastion of both secularism and democracy is in fact more of a reason to question it when you see examples of it not upholding those values. It would be like seeing a restaurant priding itself on hygiene and then seeing rats in the kitchen.

So your argument is that disenfranchisement and discrimination against your own citizens (these ARE Indians remember, living there since before 1947) is okay because they don't belong to the majority ethnicity within that state?
 
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if they have lived in india since 1947, they are citizens of india and it is the responsibility of the government to provided them with full rights and protection as per the constitution.
 
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if they have lived in india since 1947, they are citizens of india and it is the responsibility of the government to provided them with full rights and protection as per the constitution.

Thank you for being reasonable and mature about this, I respect your honesty.
 
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First of all, there are only 3 Islamic republics in the entire world right now, Iran, Gambia and Pakistan, Bangladesh is not one of them. The fact that India always regards itself as a bastion of both secularism and democracy is in fact more of a reason to question it when you see examples of it not upholding those values. It would be like seeing a restaurant priding itself on hygiene and then seeing rats in the kitchen.

So your argument is that disenfranchisement and discrimination against your own citizens (these ARE Indians remember, living there since before 1947) is okay because they don't belong to the majority ethnicity within that state?

my apologies for putting bangladesh with pakistan/iran etc.

what % of bengali muslims were living in Assam before 1947 ??
There are illegal immigrants there. They make the lives of legal residents miserable. That is the real world.
 
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my apologies for putting bangladesh with pakistan/iran etc.

what % of bengali muslims were living in Assam before 1947 ??
There are illegal immigrants there. They make the lives of legal residents miserable. That is the real world.

I couldn't tell you exact percentages as I couldn't find any pre-1947 ones, however it is relevant that at least 3 Bengali Muslim majority districts of Karimganj were included in Assam when the partition happened, so assuming majority of the population of these districts stayed, as well as the scattered Bengali Muslim emigrants across Assam originating from the 19th to early 20th century, a rough number could be guessed, I am not an expert on Assam or it's not demographics though.

I will agree with you India has a right to govern its borders, and if it wants to clamp down on illegal immigration it has its sovereign rights to, but I just feel that it's own citizens who happen to belong to the same ethnicity/religion as the immigrants shouldn't be punished via unwitting association.
 
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I couldn't tell you exact percentages as I couldn't find any pre-1947 ones, however it is relevant that at least 3 Bengali Muslim majority districts of Karimganj were included in Assam when the partition happened, so assuming majority of the population of these districts stayed, as well as the scattered Bengali Muslim emigrants across Assam originating from the 19th to early 20th century, a rough number could be guessed, I am not an expert on Assam or it's not demographics though.

I will agree with you India has a right to govern its borders, and if it wants to clamp down on illegal immigration it has its sovereign rights to, but I just feel that it's own citizens who happen to belong to the same ethnicity/religion as the immigrants shouldn't be punished via unwitting association.

I fear it is hard or impossible to distinguish between pre-1947 Bengali Muslims and post 1947 illegal immigrants
 
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my apologies for putting bangladesh with pakistan/iran etc.

what % of bengali muslims were living in Assam before 1947 ??
There are illegal immigrants there. They make the lives of legal residents miserable. That is the real world.

I couldn't tell you exact percentages as I couldn't find any pre-1947 ones, however it is relevant that at least 3 Bengali Muslim majority districts of Karimganj were included in Assam when the partition happened, so assuming majority of the population of these districts stayed, as well as the scattered Bengali Muslim emigrants across Assam originating from the 19th to early 20th century, a rough number could be guessed, I am not an expert on Assam or it's not demographics though.

I will agree with you India has a right to govern its borders, and if it wants to clamp down on illegal immigration it has its sovereign rights to, but I just feel that it's own citizens who happen to belong to the same ethnicity/religion as the immigrants shouldn't be punished via unwitting association.

The Assam Accord, signed between the Centre, the Assam government, the All Assam Gana Sangram Parishad in 1985 after a six-years' of historic anti-foreigners' movement, stipulates that anyone who entered Assam from Bangladesh after March 24, 1971 must be detected and deported.

Hence any illegal immigrant from Bangladesh between 1947 and 1971 are also eligible for the citizenship of India.
 
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The Assam Accord, signed between the Centre, the Assam government, the All Assam Gana Sangram Parishad in 1985 after a six-years' of historic anti-foreigners' movement, stipulates that anyone who entered Assam from Bangladesh after March 24, 1971 must be detected and deported.

Hence any illegal immigrant from Bangladesh between 1947 and 1971 are also eligible for the citizenship of India.

agreements are great. how to enforce it ??
Indians are wonderful in writing crappy laws that cannot be enforced
 
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agreements are great. how to enforce it ??
Indians are wonderful in writing crappy laws that cannot be enforced

The agreement is not crappy but enforcement is nearly impossible since Indians historically did not have personal identification system like Aadhaar which is being implemented now.

It is very difficult to first prove that someone has migrated from Bangladesh to India and on top of that when. And then government of India needs to obtain concurrence from government of Bangladesh to accept the same.

I would say all this is almost impractical, impossible and improbable.

Hence the focus is now on sealing and ensuring no further illegal immigration takes place now that the border agreement is in place with Bangladesh.
 
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