HomeNewsOpinionIndian citizenship concepts and definitions need a revisit

Indian citizenship concepts and definitions need a revisit

While we do not have an idea about the reasons for the revocation of citizenship, the fact remains that these erstwhile Indian citizens have opted for citizenship of different countries -- and that includes the passport of the country concerned -- where they have been residents for varying periods 

December 08, 2021 / 19:14 IST
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More than 600,000 Indians gave up their citizenship during the last five years, Union Minister of State for Home Nityanand Rai informed the Lok Sabha. While 133,000 Indians gave up citizenship in 2017, it was 134,000 in 2018, 144,000 in 2019, 85,248 in 2020 and 111,000 in 2021 until 30 September. The dip during 2020 was, without any doubt, because of the pandemic. What entails in revoking citizenship is the surrender of the Indian passport as mandated by the Indian authorities since India does not allow dual citizenship unlike her co-subcontinental countries Pakistan and Bangladesh.

While we do not have an idea about the reasons for the revocation of citizenship, the fact remains that these erstwhile Indian citizens, across the globe, have opted for citizenship of different countries (and that includes the passport of the country concerned) where they have been residents for varying periods. For all practical purposes, looked at from the lens of India’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, these former Indian citizens are “foreigners”. It may not be out of place to point out here that Padma Bhushan awardee and former ambassador to the US, Abid Hussain, had famously remarked that Indians have their heart in India, but their money in Swiss banks.

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In general parlance civil society, journalists, and even some politicians and government officials refer to any “Indian” overseas as Non-Resident Indian (NRI). That is incorrect. Only those who hold an Indian passport and have been away from the country for at least 182 days are truly categorised as NRIs. Not all Indian citizens or former Indian citizens living overseas having revoked their Indian citizenship automatically become NRIs. This nomenclature, NRIs, has been misused or at least mis-utilised quite consistently.

On the other hand, even the use of the concept of “Diaspora” in blanket terms is also quite misplaced and used indiscriminately and inappropriately. In the earlier and original way, diaspora referred, in general, to the dispersal of the Jews among the Gentiles in different parts of the world. The Jews, in such dispersal, were seeking a homeland and the desire was to get over to and congregate in such a homeland.