HomeNewsOpinionNRC across India | Behind the rhetoric lie deep challenges

NRC across India | Behind the rhetoric lie deep challenges

It is not clear if the government has factored the sheer human and physical infrastructure challenges before the country in order to implement a nation-wide NRC.

May 11, 2020 / 14:23 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Representative image
Representative image

Faced with the undeniable reality of an economic slowdown, growing unemployment and shrinking consumption, the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government seems keen on focusing on the party’s political goals, such as Ayodhya, the Uniform Civil Code, Jammu and Kashmir, and the National Register of Citizens (NRC).

The party has ‘delivered’ to its core voters on Ayodhya and Kashmir, and the Uniform Civil Code too is within its reach as the BJP enjoys majority in Parliament. However, it is the NRC where the party has faltered and tied itself up in knots. The BJP’s refusal to accept the Supreme Court-monitored NRC in Assam while at the same time promising a national-wide NRC shows it's double standards.

Story continues below Advertisement

The SC-monitored NRC has left out nearly 2 million people in Assam, at least half of them Bengali-speaking Hindus, upsetting the BJP’s plans of citing the NRC’s success in Assam as an example during the assembly election campaigns in West Bengal, which goes to the polls in 2021.

At its core, an NRC is a reasonable idea; after all a country ought to know how many citizens it has. However, the adage ‘intent is everything’ underpins an exercise like the NRC. While replying to a question in the Lok Sabha, Home Minister and BJP President Amit Shah said that the NRC will be implemented across India, and it will be repeated in Assam. The BJP’s demand to repeat the NRC is repugnant because it overlooks the severe hardship, trauma and loss of life the people of Assam have suffered once already.