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Any one reporting in the 90s in Delhi would remember the unguarded government mansion at 3 Krishna Menon Marg that hosted Arakans, Chins, Karens, Burmese, artists, journalists, children and women. This was the address of India’s Defence Minister George Fernandes, who himself occupied just one room of the house . The Burmese resistance movement was literally being played out from the Indian Defence Minister’s living quarters. Former Prime Minister I.K. Gujral once remarked, with a touch of amusement, that Fernandes had always been a fighter for lost causes.
Gujral’s “lost cause” comment seems prophetic as India deports 7 Myanmarese nationals who allegedly fled religious persecution. The caveat, though, is India is deporting Rohingyas (not Myanmarese), an identity that has been cast around religion.
Nearly 700,000 Rohingya have fled persecution in the northern Rakhine province of Myanmar for neighbouring Bangladesh since August 2017. The United Nations describe the Rohingya as the most persecuted minority in the world today.
They were arrested in 2012 and detained in Silchar Central Jail in South Assam. They were tried and convicted under the Foreigners Act. There are more awaiting trial.
Call it a coincidence but the new Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi declined to list the plea against this deportation when it came up in the Supreme Court.
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If the Thursday morning deportation of the Rohingya is any indication for things to come, 40 lakh people excluded from the final draft of NRC face a similar fate if they fail to qualify another round of verification. This outcome, however, is a practical impossibility on ground. Unlike Myanmar accepting the Rohingyas, Bangladesh is unlikely to take back a single migrant.
Further, Justice Gogoi’s first challenge will be to firewall the centre’s attempt to amend the Citizenship Act and regularise minorities like Hindus, Sikhs, Christians, Jains, Buddhists and Parsis from Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Afghanistan. The Act systematically excludes the persecuted Shias or Ahmediyas from Pakistan or Muslims from Myanmar.
It will also contradict the Assam Accord and create a political situation with the BJP in the state against the amendment. The Rohingya, however, will still face deportation.
Assam is not unfamiliar to ethnic cleansing, refugees and internally displaced people. Citizenship has been a sensitive and much abused issue exploited by political parties and groups espousing “indigenous rights”. These exercises have only reinforced the once intense Bengali-Assamese divide: the animosity between the Brahmaputra valley and the Bengali dominated Barak Valley.
Any political rearrangement with or without the amendment to the Citizenship Act will ensure religious polarisation. In this dynamic the Rohingya will again find themselves disadvantaged.
Assam’s own turbulent history of ethnic violence and displacement has torn apart the state from all directions. The sub national assertions, often unbelievably violent, have hardly ever been addressed or resolved. As a case in point, the Bodo chauvinism in Lower Assam targeting Muslims, Adivasis and other ethnicities has been responsible for at least four waves of ethnic cleansing. The displaced minorities languish in refugee camps; most have lost land and occupation.
While the major ethnic groups in Assam have reiterated the question of “who is the Assamese?” defying the caste Assamese hegemony, they have always come together in the issue of chasing out the “outsider”.
For now the Rohingya fulfill that aspiration.
(Kishalay Bhattacharjee teaches journalism at O P Jindal Global University and is the author of ‘An Unfinished Revolution: A Hostage Crisis, Adivasi Resistance and the Naxal Movement’. This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author's own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them.)
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Published: 04 Oct 2018,05:58 PM IST