By Rohantha De Silva and Keith
Jones
13 December 2019
In the face of widespread
popular opposition and warnings that India is rending its “secular”
political-constitutional order, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bharatiya
Janata Party (BJP) government have rammed through legislation that effectively
redefines Indian citizenship in Hindu supremacist terms.
Tabled in the lower house of
India’s bicameral parliament only on Monday, the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill,
2019 or CAB was given presidential assent last night.
Passage of the CAB sets the
stage for the BJP to proceed with its plans to draw up a National Register of
Citizens (NRC), under which all of India’s more than 1.3 billion residents will
have to prove, to the authorities’ satisfaction, that they are Indian citizens.
Those unable to do so will be declared stateless and subject to detention and
expulsion.
The NRC’s ostensible purpose
is to identify “illegal immigrants.” In truth—and the CAB makes this manifestly
evident—the aim of the NRC will be to harass, intimidate, and victimize India’s
Muslim minority.
Adding insult to injury, the
BJP is cynically trying to dress up the CAB, to use Modi’s words, as an act of
“compassion and brotherhood.”
The CAB grants Indian
citizenship to non-Muslims from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan who
entered India prior to 2015, on the grounds that Hindus, Sikhs, Jains,
Buddhists, and Christians in those countries have been subject to religious
persecution.
Conspicuously left off the
list are members of minority Muslims groups, such as Pakistan’s Ahmadiyas or
Afghanistan’s Shia Hazaras, who are victims of state discrimination and/or
communal violence. Also, notably absent are the Rohingya, more than one million
of whom had to flee Myanmar (Burma), which borders India to the east, in late
2016. Claiming the Rohingya are a “security threat,” the BJP government has
held those that fled into India in detention camps and is deporting them to
Myanmar.
When coupled with the CAB, the
NRC’s essentially fascistic anti-Muslim purpose becomes clear.
Given that much of India’s
population is illiterate and impoverished and state services are limited to
non-existent, hundreds of millions of people will likely find it difficult to
come up with the papers needed to “prove” their Indian citizenship. But only
Muslims will face the threat of being rendered stateless, with all that
entails, for the others will be accorded citizenship under the discriminatory
terms of the CAB.
With its CAB, wrote Indian Express columnist
Harsh Mander, “the government is clearly messaging that if people of any
identity except Muslims are unable to produce the required documents, they will
be accepted as refugees and given citizenship. This means that the real burden
to prove that they are Indian citizens (under the NRC) … is only thrust on
Muslims, because only they risk statelessness. Most Indians would find it
impossible to muster the required documents to prove their citizenship, but
only document-less Muslims will face the prospect of detention centres, or
being stripped of all citizenship rights.”
The NRC in Assam
A foul taste of what the Modi
government intends has already been provided by recent events in the
northeastern state of Assam. On the orders of the Supreme Court, and in keeping
with the terms of a reactionary agreement the Rajiv Gandhi Congress Party
government entered into in 1985 to end an exclusivist Assamese agitation, the
state’s 30 million residents were forced to prove that they or their ancestors
lived in India prior to the March 1971 eruption of the Bangladesh national
struggle against repressive Pakistani rule.
Millions suffered
psychological torment, financial hardship, and official abuse as they struggled
to “prove” they are Indian citizens. Not only did they have to prove their
citizenship claim to the satisfaction of ethno- and Hindu chauvinist officials.
Under the terms of the NRC, third parties have the right to challenge an
individual’s claim to citizenship. The All Assam Students Union (AASU) and
other groups filed close to 200,000 such objections.
Ultimately, when the “final”
NRC was published last summer, 1.9 million people, most of them poor Muslims,
were excluded—i.e., deemed non-citizens. Of these, the overwhelming majority
had been born in India (See: India labels
1.9 million Assam residents “foreigners” as prelude to their mass expulsion).
However, this outcome failed
to satisfy either the Hindu supremacist BJP or the ethno-exclusivist Assamese
organizations like the AASU. The former was angered that up to a third of those
left off the NRC were Hindus; the latter that “only” 1.9 million of Assam’s
residents were declared illegal migrants.
Now the NRC is to be extended
across India. Speaking in Monday’s debate on the CAB in the Lok Sabha, the
lower house of India’s parliament, Modi’s chief henchman, Home Minister Amit
Shah, vowed the government will rapidly move forward with the national NRC.
Shah, who has repeatedly described “illegal” Muslim “immigrants” as “termites,”
told the Lok Sabha, “Once the NRC is implemented, we will ensure no infiltrator
remains in the country.”
As part of the national NRC,
and in accordance with the newly enacted CAB, the Modi government is also
intending to redo the NRC process in Assam.
Taken together the CAB and NRC
effectively reduce India’s 200 million Muslims to second-class citizens.
Despite having implemented the
reactionary communal partition of South Asia at independence in 1947, into an
expressly Muslim Pakistan and a predominantly Hindu India, India’s Congress
Party-led government rejected the demand of the BJP’s Hindu supremacist
precursors, the Hindu Mahasabha and the RSS, that India be declared a Hindu
Rashtra or Hindu nation. The 1955 Citizenship Act, which the CAB amends,
made territoriality (i.e., birth in India or the pre-1947 British Indian
empire), not religion, the criteria of citizenship.
The Hindu right has always
rejected this, claiming that India is a first and foremost a Hindu nation. V.D.
Savarkar, the principal ideologue of Hindutva and hero of the
contemporary Hindu right, argued that India’s Muslims were not true Indians,
because for them—unlike India’s Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, and Buddhists—India is
their “motherland,” but not their “holy land.” During the late 1930s Savarkar
urged India’s Hindus to treat Muslims like the Nazis treated the Jews. If he
dropped such rhetoric during World War II, it was only because he and the Hindu
Mahasabha were hoping to form an “Anglo-Hindu” alliance with the British
colonial state so as to combat the Muslim “menace.”
In according preferential
treatment to non-Muslims from select neighbouring states, while setting up a
process whereby only Muslims must establish their Indian citizenship, the BJP
government has gone a long way to realizing the Hindu right’s longstanding
goals of asserting Hindu dominance and making religion and not territoriality
the criteria of citizenship.
The inclusion of Christians
who migrated or fled to India from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan among
those to be accorded citizenship under the CAB is a ruse. It is meant to
camouflage the legislation’s Hindu supremacist motivation, no doubt with an eye
to currying favor with the White House and the US Christian right.
Shah defended the concept of
“religious-based” citizenship in the Lok Sabha debate on the CAB, claiming it
“has been happening in India since the partition of this country.” Revealing
more of his mindset than he perhaps intended, he also declared, “India will
never be Muslim mukti (free).”
The BJP’s campaign of Hindu
supremacist assertion
Since winning re-election last
May, the Modi government has moved aggressively to realize key elements of the
agenda of the Hindu right. In this it has had either the explicit support or
acquiescence of the other institutions of the Indian state and the rest of
India’s venal ruling elite,
On August 5, Modi and Shah
working in close tandem with the top brass of the military and intelligence
agencies carried out a constitutional coup, abrogating the special
semi-autonomous status of India’s lone Muslim-majority state, Jammu and
Kashmir, and reducing it two Union Territories, thus placing the contested
region under permanent central government control.
Modi’s coup against Kashmir
has been enforced with a security clampdown that has seen thousands, including
much of the traditional pro-Indian Muslim Kashmiri elite, detained without
trial; the deployment of tens of thousands of additional security forces to
what is already one of the world’s most heavily militarized regions; and a
months-long communications blackout, including the suspension of internet and
cellphone service.
Bowing to the wishes of the
BJP and the RSS, India’s Supreme Court last month instructed the government to
oversee the construction of a Hindu temple on the site where the Babri
Masjid mosque stood until Hindu activists at the instigation of top BJP leaders
razed it to the ground on December 6, 1992. This crime provoked the bloodiest
wave of communal violence since Partition.
Modi and Shah are
systematically whipping up communal hostility against Muslims with the aim of
channeling the social tensions produced by rapacious social inequality and a
rapidly deteriorating economy behind reaction and a bellicose foreign policy,
and splitting an increasingly restive and militant working class.
With the passage of the CAB
and its vow to rapidly launch the NRC, the BJP is dramatically accelerating its
drive to transform India into a Hindu rashtra and reduce Muslims to
second-class citizenship. This is giving some sections of the ruling elite
pause. They fear the Modi government’s actions will incite mass opposition,
discredit and delegitimize the Indian state, and destabilize key state
institutions, including the military.
Already the government has
rushed troops to Assam, imposed an indefinite curfew on the state capital,
Guwahati, and suspended cellphone service in ten Assam districts after mass
protests erupted against the CAB. The protests are being led by Assam
ethno-chauvinist organizations opposed to the CAB’s granting of citizenship to
Bangladeshi Hindu migrants, some of whom were victims of communal violence.
According to press reports, at least two people were killed and many injured
Thursday when security personnel fired at protesters defying the Guwahati
curfew.
Having promoted communalism
and casteism for decades as a key strategy for politically controlling and
suppressing India’s workers and toilers, transformed the toxic Hindu
supremacist BJP into its largest party, and attacked democratic rights, the
Indian bourgeoisie and its political representatives are entirely complicit in
the growth of Hindu supremacism and the putrefaction of Indian “democracy.”
To defeat communal reaction
and defend democratic rights, the working class must be mobilized as an
independent political force, rallying the oppressed toilers behind it in the
fight against capitalist rule and on the basis of a socialist internationalist
program.
The authors also recommend:
Modi’s assault
on Kashmir and the Indian working class
[5 November 2019]
[5 November 2019]
[5 September 20119]
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