-- RVR
India has amended its citizenship law. Now it helps some non-Muslims, viz., Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis and Christians of three nations to become citizens of India. The three countries are India's Muslim-majority neighbours: Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan. Beneficiaries under the changed law should have come into India by 31st December 2014 and been here for five years to apply for citizenship.
India has amended its citizenship law. Now it helps some non-Muslims, viz., Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis and Christians of three nations to become citizens of India. The three countries are India's Muslim-majority neighbours: Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan. Beneficiaries under the changed law should have come into India by 31st December 2014 and been here for five years to apply for citizenship.
Renowned
lawyers say the amendment is Constitutionally sound. But leaving legal issues
to the Supreme Court, why is the new law just and fair, and why do the Congress
and some other parties oppose it?
First,
some basics. All nations have to make some key laws and regulations in
tune with the psyche and aspirations of its people - in a democracy,
according to the wishes of a majority of its voters, as reasonably gauged by a
government or as found in a referendum where it works. Like, the
UK may make a law or regulation for exiting from EEC, though a minority of
voters may prefer their country remaining within EEC.
Hindus
make nearly 80% of India's population, Muslims about 14%, and others 6% as
per the 2011 census. India is the land
of origin of Hinduism, and this emotionally and eternally means a lot for
Indian Hindus – and for Hindus elsewhere too – though the Indian Constitution
may be silent about it. Indian laws do not just treat non-Hindus equally with
the Hindu majority. They give minorities some privileges which the
80% Hindus don't get. Legally, Hindus are treated somewhat unequally in the
land of their origin and culture. When that inequality is worked on the ground,
abused and also maladministered, it hurts the Hindus more,
though that was unforeseen by the law.
Now,
look at citizens of minority religions in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan,
mainly Hindus who have ethnic links with Indian Hindus. They have been
persecuted over there for years and have vastly shrunk in their numbers in
those countries. Many among them have taken refuge in India. Where else
will the Hindus among them go or gain sympathy and acceptance?
Hindus
of India will naturally feel for the tormented members of their religion in
other nations - especially Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan - and would
welcome India giving relief to those distressed men and
women. That is natural. But something more is needed for action
to help. It needs an extraordinary daring to espouse and do the right
thing while governing a nation, more so when faced with opposition and protests
stoked by rival political parties. This is what the BJP-led government has done
through changes in the citizenship law. While
doing this right thing, the BJP will also be appreciated by large sections of
Indian voters, which the Congress party and many other Opposition parties are worried
about. So, the Congress and other parties oppose this measure as
discriminatory – in an attempt to embrace imagined Muslim victims of the new
law, and unaware that their stance distances them from a large number of voters
even further.
Look at
this. Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan tweets his condemnation of our
changed citizenship law. The Congress party and its leader Rahul
Gandhi too issue statements opposing the new law. Would you believe that
Pakistan never wishes India well and so opposes India's citizenship amendment –
and that the Congress party too reflects Pakistan's views against India?
Or would you imagine that the Congress party always does things right for India
and so opposes the new law – and that Pakistan too allies with Congress
sentiments for the good of India? Pakistan and the Congress party
together faulting the present Indian government on our domestic
issue shows their desperation against the Modi government. After all, Modi is a hurdle to both of them on
their plans for India and for themselves.
Critiques in the media question why Muslims who came to
India from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan as refugees are not offered
Indian citizenship on par with other refugees. This is also the voice of some Opposition political
parties. First, Muslim nations have to
take care of their Muslim citizens, and there can be no religious persecution
of Muslims by Muslims. Second, this criticism is adding insult to injury for the Indian
Hindus who are already being outgrown in their land by privileged minorities,
especially Muslims. Accelerating the
fall in the strength of the native Hindu population in any way is against the
interests and well-being of Indian Hindus. You don’t need big brains to sense
this. If you have doubts, ask people forming the majority religion in any other country if they would be at peace when minorities on their land steadily grow fast to outnumber the majority. India’s Hindus are beginning to realise that
their tolerance, goodness and hospitality have been abused by some rulers and
political parties who overly appease India’s vociferous minorities and neglect
genuine Hindu concerns and anxieties.
The
average Indian Muslim, whose ancestors were Hindus, is harmless and could
peacefully co-exist with Indian Hindus. But he is in the grip of his religious and
political exploiters and is misled by them in harbouring a needless
antipathy to Hindus or imagined insecurity in India, though enjoying privileges
he cannot get in any other country, even in a Muslim-majority nation.
The political and religious exploitation of Indian Muslims for the selfish gains of a few leaders plays a part in the protests stirred up against the amended citizenship law in parts of India. Concerns expressed by citizens in India’s north-eastern states are on a different footing, and the government must listen to them and resolve those issues separately. Otherwise, it is a test of strength for India’s political leadership to do the right thing, and stand by it with tact, diplomacy and resolve. Who else is our best bet on this except Narendra Modi, with Amit Shah by his side?
The political and religious exploitation of Indian Muslims for the selfish gains of a few leaders plays a part in the protests stirred up against the amended citizenship law in parts of India. Concerns expressed by citizens in India’s north-eastern states are on a different footing, and the government must listen to them and resolve those issues separately. Otherwise, it is a test of strength for India’s political leadership to do the right thing, and stand by it with tact, diplomacy and resolve. Who else is our best bet on this except Narendra Modi, with Amit Shah by his side?
* * *
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Copyright © R. Veera Raghavan 2019
A good article bringing out the facts. The political parties that are spreading misinformation and fanning unrest among the student community are to be condemned. Till a few years ago, such parties and 'liberals' were running to the Supreme Court for its intervention. It is heartening to note that the SC at present is not inclined to favour them and is standing by the law of the country.
ReplyDeleteLucidly written. The Gandhis are shamelessly stoking violence.
ReplyDeleteAgitations on the streets by political opponents against a legislation duly passed in the parliament show the shallowness of their commitment to democracy. The only democratic way for them is to test their stand in the next general election. They know they will fail. Hence their subversive tactics
ReplyDeleteVery nice article. Well written. The next law should be to free all Hindu Temples from the Government administration. Government and officials are allowing looting of Temple properties and assets.
ReplyDeleteExcellent post and is very clear all points and explanation are well quoted best of luck
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteFor the first time, in the history of Free India, a very specific section of the country is being openly targeted. This is what the students are protesting about. This is why India is burning right now. Do you think the students at IIT Madras, IIT Bombay and scores of other academic institutions of this country are BRAINWASHED MASSES? They are at the forefront, leading the country through Protest. More power to them!
I'll end with the noted social activist Harsh Mander's words "This graded citizenship brings back, among other histories, terrifying memories of Nazi Germany. Another remembrance of those times is the silence and indifference of non-Jew Germans. Anguished young Germans interrogate their parents and grandparents even today: “How could you have remained silent? What did you do to resist?" Decades later, these same questions will doubtless be asked of us. What answers will we give our later generations?"
This bill would have been better titled as Refugee Citizenship Bill. Or illegal immigrants bill. All those born in India that includes PoK are legal citizens of India needing no naturalisation. There bill addresses the process of issuing citizenship to immigrants from three specific neighbors who are religious minorities there. Rest have the option of applying for citizenship through existing and unaltered laws.
ReplyDeleteVery well explained Sir. As Mr.R.Sridharan has commented, this Act should b
ReplyDeletehave been termed as Refugees citizenship regulation Act.
There are three things to be considered in respect of the change of citizenship law: 1. Its impact on Indian Muslim; 2. Its impact on Hindus; and 3. Its impact on opposition political parties. 1. Indian Muslims are not adversely effected by this law. There are some of Indian Muslims who know they are not effected but have some sinister plan in their mind for the future of India and for that reason they are opposing this new law. There is not much chance for them to execute their plan in India, where there are 80% Hindus and who are starting to become aware and informed of their sinister intention and, when India has a leader in Modi. 2. Hindus are not much concerned with this change of law. They have sympathy for persecuted Hindus of Pak etc. and they are happy that their co-religionists of Pak etc. are helped by this new law. 3. This change of law is one more nail in the "coffin" of opposition political parties who are already almost dead. Their opposition to this new law is making them villain of the piece - their stand is putting them as friends of Pakistam. Therefore, they cannot accept the challenge of Modi to declare that if elected they will revock this new law, as they could not do so with Tripple Talak or Art. 370 etc.). It is brilliant piece of dear Veera Raghavan - as usual. He has acute sense to see the truth and analyse the same for common people, who do not know law much. Kudos to him for this much needed article. (Shreepal Singh could not post his comment for some technical glitch and therefore on his request his comment is being uploaded by a friend)
ReplyDeleteVery nicely written. But we have
ReplyDeleteto watch how Modi is going to handle the riots happening all over.
Ramgopal
A neat,logical presentation. Very well explained.
ReplyDeleteExplained nicely. The fact of the matter is that CAA is not concerned about Indian National Muslims at all. Don’t know as to why they make so much hoe and cry
ReplyDeleteThe protests are having more impact than the act itself now. 4 states have voted against it. There's a lot of negative vibes over this on the central govt that can't be denied. Perhaps the way it was introduced wasn't smooth. Requires serious consideration on the part of the govt to handle the protests..
ReplyDeleteமுதலில் டிசம்பர் மாதம் நீங்கள் போட்ட இந்த கட்டுரையை இன்றுதான் நான் பார்த்தேன்.மன்னிக்க வேண்டும். என்னுடைய கருத்துகளை முன்பே நான் வெளியிட்டு இருக்க வேண்டும். பரவாயில்லை இப்போது கிடைத்துள்ள வாய்ப்புக்கு இன்னும் கொஞ்சம் பலம் அதிகம். ஏனெனில் இந்த சட்டத்தின் அத்தியாவசியத்தை மக்கள் இப்போது அதாவது இந்த டில்லி கலவரங்களுக்கு பிறகு நன்கு உணர ஒரு வாய்ப்பு கிடைத்துள்ளது. நீங்கள் எழுதியுள்ள கருத்துகள் எத்தனை தீர்க்கதரிசனமானது என்பது பலருக்கும் புரிந்து போயிருக்கலாம். பாராட்டுகிறேன்
ReplyDeleteஇன்னும் ஒரு சட்டம் கட்டாயம் கொண்டு வரப்பட வேண்டும். அரசியல் அமைப்பு சட்டம் கட்டாயம் திருத்தப்படவேண்டும். இத்தனை ஆண்டுகள் மதசார்பற்றநாடு என்று கூறிவந்தோம். அது வெகு சீக்கிரம் மாறி விடுமோ என்ற அச்சம் ஹிந்துக்கள் மத்தியில் எழுந்துவிட்டது. இந்து நாடு என்று அறிவிக்கப்படுவது அவசியம். இல்லையேல் அரசியலமைப்பில் இன்று மைனாரிட்டியாக இருப்பவர்கள் அரசாட்சியை கைப்பற்றும் நிலை வருமேயானால் மதசார்பற்ற ஆட்சி என்ற நிலை மாற்றப்படக்கூடாது. அப்படி மாற்ற முயன்றால் பாராளுமன்ற அநுமதி இல்லாமலே அந்த ஆட்சியை கலைக்க ஜனாதிபதிக்கு அதிகாரம் தரப்பட வேண்டும். மைனாரிட்டிகள் ஆட்சி அமைக்க அழைக்கப்படுகையில் அன்றைய நிலையில் மைனாரிட்டி சமூகத்தை சேர்ந்த ஜனாதிபதி பதவியில் இருப்பின் உச்சநீதிமன்ற தலைமை நீதிபதி ஒரு ஹிந்து மத ஜனாதிபதியை நியமித்து அதன் பிறகே அவர்கள் ஆட்சி அமைக்க அழைக்கப்பட வேண்டும்.பாரதம் என்றும் மதசார்பற்ற நாடாகவே செயல்பட உறுதி செய்யப் படவேண்டும். இல்லையேல் நம் வருங்கால தலைமுறைகள் அமைதி இழந்து இன்று பாக்கிஸ்தான் போன்ற நாடுகளில் இந்துக்கள் படும் அவலநிலையை எய்துவர்
இன்று மைனாரிட்டிகளுக்கு ஓட்டுக்காக ஆதரிப்பவர்கள்/கட்சிகள் பெரியதொரு அநீதியை மெஜாரிட்டி சமூகத்துக்கு செய்து வருவது உங்கள் கட்டுரையில் நன்கு விளக்கப் பட்டுள்ளது.