NRC across India,Amit Shah tells Rajya Sabha
New Delhi: The National Register of Citizens (NRC) process will be carried out across India, Union Home Minister Amit Shah said in the Rajya Sabha on Wednesday while making it clear that there would be no discrimination on the basis of religion.
Stating that the government accepts that refugees - Hindu, Buddhists, Jain, Christians, Sikhs and Parsis - who left Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan due to religious atrocities should get Indian citizenship, Shah said: "No one irrespective of their religion should be worried. It is just a process to get everyone under the NRC."
He was replying to a supplementary during Question Hour in the Upper House on Wednesday.
The Home Minister said there is no provision in the NRC that people belonging to other religions will not be included in the register. "People from all religions who are Indian citizens will be included. There is no question of any discrimination on the basis of religion. NRC is a different process and the Citizenship Amendment Bill is different," Shah said.
In Assam, the NRC process was carried out as per Supreme Court order, he said and added that when the NRC process will be implemented in the entire country, Assam will also be included. The Home Minister said that in Assam, people whose name has not figured in the draft list, have the right to go to the Tribunal.
"Tribunals will be constituted across Assam. If any person doesn't have the money to approach tribunals, then the Assam government will bear the cost to hire a lawyer," he said. Shah reiterated that all citizens of India irrespective of religion will figure in the NRC list.
The home minister said the government accepts that Hindu refugees, Buddhists, Jain, Christians and Sikh and Parsi should get this country's citizenship and this is why the Citizenship Amendment Bill is there.
"All refugees coming from Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanistan on account of religious atrocities will get citizenship under the Bill," he said. He said the Lok Sabha had passed the Bill and the Select Committee had approved it. But it had lapsed. "Now it will come again. It has no connection with the NRC," he said.