[《Assam is once again on the precipice. With opinions sharply divided
between the people of Barak and Brahmaputra valleys over the controversial
Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2016, the state has now been virtually spit
down the middle, socially and geographically.

With daggers drawn, tension is simmering between members of the Assamese
community primarily residing in the Brahmaputra Valley and the Bengalis,
dominant in the Barak Valley and residing in a few pockets of the
Brahmaputra Valley.》]

https://www.news18.com/news/opinion/opinion-with-assam-split-down-the-middle-over-citizenship-bill-dispur-and-delhi-must-talk-it-out-with-stakeholders-1935535.html?fbclid=IwAR0knCqJv7qY5DhwJx3xz-3KcC7IGBZDw9eL6Pbpepr-X03xArna3Gz2jRw

6-MIN READ

Divisions on Citizenship Bill, NRC Push Assam Back on Rocky Road to
Anarchy, Chaos
The citizenship bill exposed the traditional fault-line between the two
major communities, which dates back to British Raj days.

Anirban Choudhury |

Updated:November 11, 2018, 1:09 PM IST

People whose names were left out of the National Register of Citizens (NRC)
draft stand in a queue to collect forms to file appeals near an NRC center
on the outskirts of Guwahati on August 13, 2018. (AP)

Assam is once again on the precipice. With opinions sharply divided between
the people of Barak and Brahmaputra valleys over the controversial
Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2016, the state has now been virtually spit
down the middle, socially and geographically.

With daggers drawn, tension is simmering between members of the Assamese
community primarily residing in the Brahmaputra Valley and the Bengalis,
dominant in the Barak Valley and residing in a few pockets of the
Brahmaputra Valley.

Ever since the Bill got momentum, especially with the Joint Parliamentary
Committee members visiting the state earlier this year and subsequently
submitting its report, the state witnessed deep linguistic polarisation,
reminiscent of the anti-foreigners’ movement days (1979-1985). And with the
kind of provocative statements coming from either camps and a large section
of the state’s media (mostly electronic) unabashedly acting as agent
provocateurs with utterly biased and inflammatory content aimed at inciting
communal passion, Assam clearly is seemingly once again hurtling on the
track to anarchy and chaos.

The state government’s mysterious silence on such a crucial issue with
ominous portent and even in the face of extreme provocations has not helped
matters. Despite the open threats and intimidations emanating regularly
from those opposing the Bill and equally irresponsible statements from a
section of the ruling party leaders, Dispur has miserably failed to tackle
the situation by even communicating properly — no clear statement till date
vis-à-vis the content of the Bill nor the BJP or the Assam government’s
stand on it.

Actually, the Bill seeks to provide citizenship to immigrants belonging to
Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, Jain, Parsi and Sikh communities from
Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan who had entered India illegally prior
to December 31, 2014 following religious persecution. Thus, it isn’t Assam
or Bangladeshi Hindu-specific and there is a cut-off date. Also, there are
some members from tribes like the Garos, Khasis, Rabhas, Chakmas, etc, from
Bangladesh who are residing in the Northeast illegally. The Bill is
expected to come in handy for them too.

But, with no counter-narrative from the ruling dispensation, the
jatiyatabadis (aka nationalists) have been quick to exploit the fluid
situation to their advantage, if not running riot. No doubt, their
hypothesis that Bangladeshi Hindus numbering about 1.70 crore would
overwhelm Assam’s ethnic communities once the Bill is passed is getting
popular credence in the Brahmaputra Valley.

They are also pointing out that it will repudiate the Assam Accord of 1985
that fixed March 24, 1971 as the cut-off date for detection and deportation
of illegal Bangladeshis, besides the ongoing update of National Register of
Citizens (NRC) under the Supreme Court’s monitoring. However, Bengali
organisations feel that justice will be finally done to scores of Bengali
Hindus who had fled erstwhile East Pakistan due to religious persecution
and were being hounded decades later in the land they had chosen to live.

Influential organisations like the All Assam Students’ Union (AASU) are
even trying to mobilise support from other ethnic groups across the other
North-eastern States and even political groups outside, including NDA
partners like JD(U), against the Bill.

And the current situation reached a flashpoint when five innocent Bengalis
were shot dead by unidentified gunmen (suspected to be militants) at Dhola
in Tinsukia district on November 1. But what was even more disturbing was
the somewhat militant opposition by several organisations opposed to the
Bill to the Assam bandh called the following day by some Bengali
organisations to protest the killing. Now, contrast this with the fact that
such bandhs called in the past by other communities in the backdrop of
targeted mass killings by militant outfits were generally met with popular
empathy, if not sympathy.

The latest episode clearly exposed the underlying simmering tension between
the Assamese and Bengali communities, besides confirming that linguistic
polarisation was near complete as between the two valleys. This is also
borne out by the fact that the killing was not widely condemned, with even
the Assamese intelligentsia preferring to remain mum and hardly any
editorials against it.

All these have fuelled a sense of insecurity among a large section of the
Bengalis residing in the state, especially those in the Brahmaputra Valley.

There is no love lost between members of the two communities, but the Bill
has certainly helped exacerbate the somewhat latent mutual suspicion (if
not hatred) that always characterised the nature of their relationship. It
has exposed the traditional fault-line between the two major communities,
which dates back to British Raj days.

Of course, the ruling dispensation has to apportion a major share of the
blame for its somewhat inept handling of such a critical issue that has the
potential of flaring up and quickly spiralling out of control and tearing
asunder Assam’s fragile social fabric. But the BJP, which is leading a
three-party alliance government, can be somewhat excused for its
indecisiveness given the fact that it is torn between the pull and push of
retaining support base within both the Assamese and Bengali communities.
Its alliance partner and regional party AGP has already come out loud and
clear against the Bill.

In this backdrop, the two-phase panchayat elections scheduled on December 5
and 9 are being seen as crucial and an acid test for the BJP, coming as it
is in the run-up to the 2019 Lok Sabha election. Also, the current
situation couldn’t have come at a more inopportune time for the dominant
ruling coalition partner given the fact that it is already under fire from
many quarters over the ongoing update of NRC.

Meanwhile, the current tumult has brought to fore once again the complex
social structure of the Northeast that defines its political landscape too,
especially the latent feeling of insecurity among many ethnic communities,
primarily about their culture and language. Unlike in rest of the country,
polarisation in this part primarily tends to be along ethnic and linguistic
lines as borne out by the region’s politico-social history. The fear of
being overwhelmed by another community is paramount — the Bodos or Karbis
vis-à-vis the Assamese or the Assamese vis-à-vis the Bengalis, etc. The
current hullabaloo over the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill reflects this
reality.

However, it is widely believed the current conflagration is unlikely to
inflame any further. A re-run of foreigners’ movement days is doubtful due
to several factors, including inherent contradictions within the construct
of greater Assamese society and a strong undercurrent of “nationalistic”
sentiment. Many also see AASU leaders meeting the bereaved of the Dhola
massacre victims as part of their conscious effort not to be seen as
pursuing a parochial agenda. The elders, too, don’t want a return to the
tumultuous days of foreigners’ movement. At the most, many believe only the
state’s political discourse would get more toxic.

Finally, full credit to Assam’s aam aadmi for having exercised utmost
restraint in the face of extreme provocations for the past few months.
There hasn’t been a single stray incident of communal violence. However,
both Dispur and Delhi would do well not to allow the current situation to
adrift any further and actively engage with all stakeholders to clarify
their misgivings about the Bill, instead of rushing with it in Parliament.

(The author is a Guwahati-based journalist. Views are personal)

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to greenyouth+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send an email to greenyouth@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to