Live
- KTR to participate in Deeksha Diwas on Nov 29
- First Telugu bureaucrat to become CAG of India
- Plea in HC to extend voting rights to teachers in Council polls; notices issued to govt
- Political heat rises over Adani indictment in AP
- Excise police arrest five, seize 1.1 kg ganja
- GRP nabs one, recovers gold ornaments worth Rs 21 lakh
- Design conclave held at T-Hub
- EAGLE eye on drug menace
- Let’s return to our roots, Venkaiah Naidu tells people
- TG has 234 enemy properties; RR district tops the list
Just In
NRC won't have implications on Bangladesh: Foreign Secretary Shringla
Bangladesh was also apparently upset following the rollout of the National Register of Citizens in Assam even though India conveyed to it that the issue was an internal matter of the country.
Dhaka: India on Monday assured Bangladesh that the updation of the National Register of Citizens will have no implications for its people, asserting that it is a process that is entirely internal to the country.
Bangladesh Foreign Minister AK Abdul Momen and Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan cancelled their visits to India in December over prevailing situation following the passage of the new citizenship bill.
Bangladesh was also apparently upset following the rollout of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) in Assam even though India conveyed to it that the issue was an internal matter of the country.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina had taken up the issue of NRC with Prime Minister Narendra Modi during their bilateral meeting in New York in September.
"Updation of National Register of Citizens is a process that is entirely internal to India," Foreign Secretary Shringla said on Monday.
"India assures Bangladesh that NRC will have no implications for the country and its people," he said at a seminar 'Bangladesh & India: A Promising Future' held in Dhaka.
Shringla, who previously served as India's high commissioner in Dhaka, is in Bangladesh on a visit during which he would meet Prime Minister Hasina and Foreign Minister Momen.
According to the Citizenship Amendment Act, members of Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi and Christian communities who have come from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan till December 31, 2014, following religious persecution there will get Indian citizenship.
© 2024 Hyderabad Media House Limited/The Hans India. All rights reserved. Powered by hocalwire.com