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CN Desk: In total contravention of established policies in secular, democratic India,
Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma has made a controversial distinction
between Bangladeshi migrants based on religion. The chief minister, known for
his strident anti-Muslim remarks and Islamophobic slurs, asserted that Hindu
migrants should be treated as refugees, while Muslims should be identified as
infiltrators.Speaking on citizenship and migration, Sarma said that Hindus and Muslims
from Bangladesh cannot be viewed as a single community. “Bangladeshi Muslims
are one community, and Bangladeshi Hindus are another. These are two separate
communities,” he stated, underlining what he described as the political and
legal differences between the two groups.Speaking during the West Bengal Assembly election campaign on Saturday, the
chief minister asserted that while Hindu refugees fleeing persecution are
regularised as Indian citizens under the Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019 (CAA),
Muslim entrants are illegal “infiltrators” who must be deported.Sarma criticised the Trinamool Congress (TMC) for putting both groups in
“one basket,” claiming this propagates misconceptions. He alleged that
unchecked infiltration of Bangladeshi Muslims is causing a demographic shift
and is a threat to national security. He claimed the Muslim population in Assam
has reached nearly 40%.He vowed a relentless crackdown, noting that 20 illegal Bangladeshis were
“pushed back” during the past 24 hours and over 400 have been deported in
recent months. Referring to the CAA, the Assam chief minister pointed out that
the legislation provides a pathway to Indian citizenship for non-Muslim
minorities — including Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis, and Christians
— from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan who entered India on or before
December 31, 2014.Sarma emphasised that the CAA recognizes Bangladeshi Hindus as refugees
eligible for Indian citizenship, while excluding Muslims from its scope. “When
we say infiltrators, we are referring to Bangladeshi Muslims, not Hindus.
Hindus are refugees, not infiltrators,” he said, reiterating the BJP’s position
on the issue.
According to Sarma, the BJP’s approach is to protect persecuted Hindu
refugees while taking firm action against what he termed as “illegal
infiltration.” He described this stance as part of the party’s “decisive
politics,” especially in Border States like Assam and West Bengal, where
migration continues to be a sensitive and politically charged issue.