By:
D. N. Bezboruah, Editor, The Sentinel
(at www.vigilonline.com)
January 02, 2005
(We have great pleasure in enclosing the speech of Shri Bezboruah,
Editor, The Sentinel in Guwahati on the latest census report held at a
seminar and public meeting on 13th Nov 04 - vigil.org)
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The biggest problem facing Assam and the north-eastern States of India
today is large-scale illegal migration from Bangladesh. The problem is
very serious today because at the present rate of influx, there is the
very real danger of Assam being annexed to Bangladesh in just a couple of
decades from now. And the irony of the situation is that the problem has
stemmed from greed on both sides – greed for cultivable land on one side
and greed for votes on the other. And now there is the remarkable poetic
justice of the greed for power having infected the providers of easy
illegal votes as well.
However, it would be wrong to conclude that this invasion from present
Bangladesh and erstwhile East Pakistan is a recent phenomenon. This silent
invasion had started much before Partition. In the 1931 census report of
Assam, C.S. Mullan, the Superintendent of Census Operations had recorded
the following observations:
“Probably the most important event in the province during the last
twenty-five years – an event, moreover, which seems likely to alter
permanently the whole future of Assam and to destroy… the whole structure
of Assamese culture and civilization – has been the invasion of a vast
horde of land-hungry Bengali immigrants, mostly Muslims, from the
districts of Eastern Bengal and in particular from Mymensingh.
“Without fuss, without tumult… a population which must amount to over half
a million has transplanted itself from Bengal to the Assam Valley during
the last twenty-five years… the only thing I can compare it to is the mass
movement of a large body of ants.”
Mullan had said this when the population of Assam was only around
5,561,000. He had gone on to make the prediction that the time was not far
off when the Assamese people would be confined to the district of Sibsagar.
What adds poignancy to that prediction today is that this is not only
beginning to happen, but that the prediction is likely to hold good for
the new district of Sivasagar which is about a third of the Sibsagar
district of Mullan’s time in size.
The Muslim cultivators from East Bengal were encouraged by the Muslim
League government of Mohammad Sadullah in Assam ostensibly for the Grow
More Food Campaign. However, Viceroy Lord Wavell said in his Memoirs that
Sadullah was much more interested in growing more Muslims.
After the partition of the subcontinent in 1947, a large number of Hindus
crossed over from East Pakistan to the States of West Bengal, Assam and
Tripura. Later on, when the Pakistani Army started persecuting Bengalis, a
large number of Muslims too crossed the border into India. After the
break-up of Pakistan and the liberation of Bangladesh in 1971 with the
help of India, it was expected that the new regime would ensure communal
harmony and tackle the social and economic problems of that country in a
manner that would eliminate or at least reduce the factors contributing to
migration. However, this did not happen, and both Hindus and Muslims
continued to pour into India from Bangladesh in large numbers. This is
best appreciated by taking a look at the increase in the population of
Assam over the decades. The figures are in millions.
|
1901 |
1911 |
1921 |
1931 |
1941 |
1951 |
1961 |
1971 |
1981* |
1991 |
2001 |
|
3.29
|
3.849 |
4.637 |
5.561 |
6.694 |
8.029 |
10.837 |
14.625 |
19.896 |
22.295 |
26.656 |
*
Assam
did not have a census operation in 1981. The figure for the year is a
projection made by the Census of India on the basis of earlier figures.
It will
be noticed that Assam’s population doubled in the 40 years between 1901
and 1941, and more than doubled in the 30 years between 1941 and 1971. And
going by the projected population of 1981, it almost doubled in the 20
years between 1961 and 1981. In the 70 years between 1901 and 1971,
Assam’s
population increased from 3.29 million to 14.6 million – a 343.77 per cent
increase over a period when the population of India had gone by only about
150 per cent. Obviously, this did not happen because the people of Assam
had become twice as fertile as their compatriots elsewhere. In fact, the
general fertility rate for rural
Assam
for 1978 was 126.5 (all-India rural rate: 137.3) and the rate for urban
Assam was 94.3 as opposed to the national urban figure of 102. This
happened largely due to migration from former
East
Bengal
and
East
Pakistan
and present Bangladesh. Increases in Assam’s population during recent
decades are even more interesting in establishing the kind of accelerated
growth that has taken place. Between 1951 and 1961, Assam’s population
increased by 34.98 per cent. During the next decade from 1961 to 1971 too
Assam’s population increased by 34.95 per cent. As such the projected
population for 1981 – 19.896 million – was fairly accurate, since it
translated into a decadal growth of 36.04 per cent. This was very close to
the population growth over the two earlier decades of 34.98 and 34.95.
Interestingly enough, the projection of Assam’s population for 1981 done
by the Statesman’s Year Book published by Macmillan from London put
the figure at 19.902 million – a difference of only about 6,000 from the
Census of India projection in a population of nearly 20 million. However,
after the census of 1991, the projected population figure of Assam for
1981 was revised to 18.04 million (down by about 1.85 million). This gave
a comfortable decadal increase in population of just 23.35 per cent for
Assam against the national decadal growth of 23.5 per cent for the same
period.
If the
population growth rate of Assam has been most alarming, there are two
other aspects of this that are even more alarming. One is the growth rate
of voters in the State and the other the rate of growth of the Muslim
population almost entirely due to illegal immigration. Between 1957 and
1962 (just five years), the number of voters increased from 4.493 million
to 4.943 million (10 per cent). In the next four years, the number of
voters increased by 13 per cent to 5.585 million. By 1970, the number of
voters stood at 5.702 million. However, within a year after that
the number of voters rose by 10.42 per cent to stand at 6.296 million.
The objective of the ruling political party of that period was to ensure
that the Congress had an easy victory in the elections, even if it meant
getting foreign voters to vote in Indian elections, in total violation of
our constitutional provisions. The party succeeded eminently, though it
did not stop to think of the consequences either for Assam, the North-east
or the country as a whole.
The 2001
census put Assam’s population at 26,655,528. Of this, 17,296,455 were
recorded as Hindus and 8,240,611 as Muslims. What was indeed remarkable
was that the Census of India gave the statistical break-up of the
population on religious lines only on
September
6, 2004
– three years after the census. Something similar had happened in respect
of the 1991 census as well, with the office of the Registrar General of
India parting with the religious break-up only two years after the event.
When the census data are published, one expects them to be complete in all
respects – including the religious break-up. Why should there be an
attempt to suppress the religious break-up for two or three years? After
all, The World Almanac and Book of Facts, which is an annual
publication, has the religion-wise break-up of the population of each
country in the very first paragraph of the data on each country. It is
only a government unduly sensitive to the abnormal demographic changes
that it has brought upon the country, that would attempt to conceal such
facts from the nation. In any case, the Registrar General of India did
divulge one important change in the demography of Assam soon after the
2001 census: that out of the 27 districts of Assam, six districts –
Barpeta, Dhubri, Goalpara, Nagaon, Karimganj and Hailakandi -- had a
Muslim majority. There would be nothing very remarkable about this in a
secular republic, had this demographic change been due to a higher
fertility rate among the Muslims of the State. But here we have a case of
an orchestrated and engineered demographic change (with the help of
foreign nationals) just to ensure electoral advantage to a political
party, regardless of the consequences for the State or for the security
and integrity of the country. And this is an objective that jells very
well with the motivations of the Bangladeshi nationals who have
infiltrated into different parts of India in such large numbers as to
account for about 10,810,000 of them in our country with about four
million in
Assam
and four million more in West Bengal,
and with
Bihar
accounting for two million.
It is
indeed regrettable that Government of India should have reacted the way it
did to the Census of India’s report on the religious demography of India
published on
September
4, 2004.
The report revealed that the decadal growth of the Muslim population of
India had increased to 36 per cent from the figure for the earlier decade
34.5 per cent. It also revealed that the decadal growth rate of the Hindu
population had come down from 25.1 per cent to 20.5 per cent. This
revelation set the alarm bells ringing down the corridors of North Block,
and soon the Census of India had ‘adjusted’ and ‘unadjusted’ figures of
the decadal growth of population by deleting the population figures for
both Assam and Jammu & Kashmir. It was as if deleting the populations of
the two States would have the effect of eliminating them altogether on the
ground as well!
However,
the strongest motivation for the large-scale Bangladeshi infiltration into
Assam and the north-eastern States is what German intellectuals have
called lebensraum or “living space”. The population of Bangladesh
is close to 147 million. With an area of 55,599 sq. miles, it has a
population density of 2,838 per sq. mile. Thus a large-scale exodus
anywhere is a sort of godsend for Bangladesh. Bangladesh is only too
well aware of the illegal vote-bank created by the Congress in Assam, and
has taken full advantage of the vulnerability of the Congress in the
matter of detection, disfranchisement and deportation of Bangladeshis.
Perhaps the earliest proponent of the idea of lebensraum for
Bangladesh was Mr Sadeq Khan who wrote the article “The Question of
Lebensraum” in the weekly newspaper
Holiday
in its issue of
October
18, 1991.
This is how he began: “The question of lebensraum or living space
for the people of Bangladesh has not yet been raised as a moot issue. All
projections, however, clearly indicate that by the next decade, that is to
say by the first decade of the 21st century, Bangladesh will
face a serious crisis of lebensraum. No possible performance of
population planning, actual or hypothetical, significantly alters that
prediction.” Having had his say on the crisis of living space that
Bangladesh will face by the first decade of the 21st century,
he goes on to argue in the next paragraph how the “colonial devastation of
Bengal in the 18th and 19th centuries, left the
region of Bangladesh bereft of the traditional strength of technology and
productivity.” And then come the two crucial paragraphs that leave no one
in any doubt about what Bangladesh’s intentions are. This is what they
say:
“It is
said that a borderless world has become the prime requisite for economic
growth under the new world order. In fairness, if consumer benefit is
considered to be better served by borderless competitive trade of
commodities, why not borderless competitive trade of labour? There is no
reason why
Bangladesh should not insist on a globalized manpower market as consumer
markets of nation-states are being progressively globalized under the
dictates of monetarists. There is no reason why regional and international
cooperation could not be worked out to plan
and
execute population movements and settlements to avoid
critical demographic pressures in pockets of high concentration. There is
no reason why under-populated regions in the developed world cannot make
room for planned colonies to relieve build-up of demographic disasters in
countries like
Bangladesh.
“We shall
hope for the best in international cooperation. We shall hope for the best
in accommodation from the developed world. In reality, nevertheless,
Bangladesh may expect little external relief in the short run on the issue
of lebensraum.
It is also doubtful that
Bangladesh
may develop sufficient sustainable urbanization or can engineer
sufficient reclamation of habitable land from its offshore potential to
settle its projected population growth in the next decade. A natural
overflow of population pressure is therefore very much on the cards and
will not be restrainable by barbed wire or border patrol measures. The
natural trend of population overflow from
Bangladesh is towards the sparsely populated lands of the South East in
the Arakan side and of the North East in the Seven Sisters side of the
Indian subcontinent.”
Put in
simple language, what Sadeq Khan is saying is: We do not have enough land.
So we will take land from Myanmar and India’s North-east. And we dare you
to stop us either with barbed-wire fencing or the BSF.
It would,
however, be a mistake to jump to the conclusion that Bangladesh’s motives
for the large-scale illegal infiltration of West Bengal, Assam and the
North-east in general has nothing more to it than population pressure
within that country and a search for living space. This thrust is not just
economic. The encouragement of insurgent activity in India’s North-east
through the simple expedient of providing asylum and training facilities
to Indian insurgent outfits and the facilitation of ISI and al Qaeda
collaboration with such insurgent outfits, speak of more sinister
expansionist ambitions in this region. There is a clear move to establish
an Islamic country in India’s North-east, and the project is moving
forward relentlessly because of India’s weak response to such situations
that pose a threat to the country’s security and integrity. What is much
worse is that Bangladesh has its eager collaborators within the country
even among former ministers, but the Government of India has been able to
do precious little to tackle even the collaborators of Bangladesh in
India.
However,
this is not the worst of it yet. The greatest encouragement to illegal
immigration from Bangladesh comes from the separate and discriminatory
immigration law enacted solely for Assam in 1983 called the Illegal
Migrants (Determination by Tribunals) Act or the IM (DT) Act for short.
Its salient features are: (a) it represents the only known case of any
civilized democratic republic having two immigration laws -– one for the
entire country and the other for just one State; (b) it is only
immigration law that is kind to the illegal migrant, making it virtually
impossible for the state authorities to deport him even if he is detected;
(c) it is the only known immigration law that takes away the onus of
proving nationality from the illegal migrant and transfers it to
individual citizens who must make a complaint before a tribunal and also
pay a fine for doing this patriotic and hazardous duty; and (d) this
immigration law takes away the responsibility of detecting and deporting
foreign nationals from the Executive and vests it with quasi-judicial
tribunals manned by retired and tired judges. And we can thank our
lawmakers for this mindless sabotage of the immigration law of the country
and the conscious effort to create another
Kashmir
or Cyprus in Assam. so that the State can be annexed by a country that
India once created. Ironically, the worst enemies of Assam and the nation
as a whole have been our own elected representatives. It is important to
bear in mind that in 1983, the Assam Valley had boycotted the general
elections, and did not have any representatives in Parliament. Thus the IM
(DT) Act was legislated behind the back of Assam in 1983 when the Congress
had a steamroller majority in Parliament.
It is not
just that Bangladesh is aware of the IM (DT) Act. In fact, it is the
pro-Bangladesh lobby in India that got our MPs to commit hara-kiri on our
behalf. But that is not all there is to it. The security threat for India
arising from the Bangladeshi resolve to annex the North-east of India is
spine-chilling. The presence of Pakistan’s ISI agents in Bangladesh is a
well-known fact. They not only arranged the training of the ULFA top brass
in Pakistan, but have also been training insurgents from the North-east in
the training camps located in Bangladesh. The ISI hand in the recent twin
blasts in Dimapur (which took several lives) is beyond any doubts now. But
what is much worse is that the al Qaeda is also in Bangladesh now
imparting training to insurgents from the North-east. The Time
magazine article of the issue of October 21, 2002 is a terrifying pointer
to this.
Where do
we go from here? The answer can be quite laconic: to Bangladesh. After
all, have not our elected representatives worked quite assiduously for
just this kind of an end result? But what can be done even now to save
Assam and India’s North-east from being ceded to Bangladesh?
Whatever
measures we think of, it is clear that any hopes of pushing back the four
million Bangladeshis from Assam and an equal number from West Bengal
across the border would be a utopian dream. Economic pragmatism would
suggest the acceptance of a chunk of the illegal immigrants already here.
Having done this, it is imperative to bring in the following measures
quite ruthlessly:
Greater
border control with barbed wire fencing wherever possible, and a larger
and better-equipped border control force with shoot-at-sight instructions
just as we have on the Indo-Pakistan border.
Immediate
repeal of the IM (DT) Act and reintroduction of the Foreigners Act for
Assam as well.
Total
economic boycott of all illegal migrants. This is an idea that is held to
be utopian, but in the context of Assam, this is desperately needed since
much of the illegal immigration was made possible just because we created
an economic vacuum.
The
proposal to issue work permits to Bangladeshis should be held in abeyance
for the next 20 years.
Multi-purpose identity cards should be issued to all Indian citizens
(especially along the border areas). However, it is quite possible that
the illegal migrants will among the first to get identity cards.
A uniform
civil code should be introduced for everyone living in India (not just
Indian citizens). Polygamy as a means of increasing the immigrant
population very fast is standard practice among Bangladeshi immigrants.
It is
important to help the youth of Assam to acquire manual skills so that they
can do all skilled work.
Coercive
diplomacy with Bangladesh. We have nothing to lose but our reputation for
weakness in dealing with a country we created.
D. N. Bezboruah, Editor, The
Sentinel
at www.vigilonline.com
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