Reference Text
Time Left10:00
With
the
National
Register
of
Citizens
draft
list
leaving
out
40
lakh
applicants,
a
big
political
row
has
erupted
in
the
country.
While
BJP
has
defended
the
NRC
exercise
with
party
president
Amit
Shah
calling
it
the
soul
of
the
1985
Assam
Accord
to
identify
illegal
migrants,
Congress
has
criticised
the
process
saying
that
genuine
citizens
have
been
left
out.
Meanwhile,
Trinamool
Congress
head
and
Bengal
chief
minister
Mamata
Banerjee
has
alleged
that
the
exercise
has
been
carried
out
to
divide
people.
Political
parties
are
formulating
their
respective
positions
on
NRC
with
an
eye
on
the
next
Lok
Sabha
elections.
The
Assam-specific
exercise
is
perfect
for
more
widespread
dog-whistle
signalling.
For
example,
BJP
clearly
plans
to
politically
cash
in
on
the
issue
by
projecting
itself
as
the
party
that
finally
took
decisive
action
against
illegal
Bangladeshi
infiltrators.
The
subtext
here
is
that
Muslim
migrants
from
neighbouring
countries
have
no
place
in
India.
This
was
underlined
by
Amit
Shah
himself
as
he
reiterated
that
changes
were
being
made
to
the
Citizenship
Act
for
Hindu
and
Sikh
refugees.
Congress,
while
critical
of
NRC,
finds
it
hard
to
dissociate
itself
from
the
Assam
Accord
that
Rajiv
Gandhi
had
signed.
Hence
the
party's
recourse
to
technical
flaws
of
the
exercise
in
the
hope
of
appealing
to
both
for
and
against
NRC
constituencies.
And
Trinamool's
forceful
rejection
of
NRC
positions
it
as
a
party
for
the
aggrieved
particularly
Bengali
speaking
Muslims
in
Assam
and
Bengal.
Adding
to
the
politicking
is
the
fact
that
the
final
NRC
list
is
expected
by
the
end
of
the
year
close
to
the
tentative
Lok
Sabha
poll
schedule.
Notably,
none
of
the
parties
have
spoken
about
solutions
for
those
who
will
be
left
out
of
the
final
NRC.
If
Trinamool
genuinely
cared,
why
is
Bengal
among
the
worst
defaulters
in
NRC
verification,
returning
only
6%
of
the
documents
sent
to
it
for
authentication?
Similarly,
the
Supreme
Court
which
is
overseeing
the
exercise
and
has
said
no
coercive
action
should
be
taken
based
on
the
draft
list
should
have
been
more
proactive
in
preventing
anomalies.
Taken
together,
the
NRC
has
become
a
convenient
political
tool.
Bengal
BJP
has
now
proposed
an
NRC
for
that
state
should
it
come
to
power
there.
Such
proposals
have
no
legal
basis
and
only
aim
to
whip
up
hysteria.
The
people,
as
usual,
remain
the
political
football.
With
the
National
Register
of
Citizens
draft
list
leaving
out
40
lakh
applicants,
a
big
political
row
has
erupted
in
the
country.
While
BJP
has
defended
the
NRC
exercise
with
party
president
Amit
Shah
calling
it
the
soul
of
the
1985
Assam
Accord
to
identify
illegal
migrants,
Congress
has
criticised
the
process
saying
that
genuine
citizens
have
been
left