Illegal immigration to India

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An illegal immigrant in India . Those who are explicitly granted refugee status o reliable numbers on illegal immigrants are currently available.

2001 India Census Gives information about Migrants but not exclusively Illegal Immigrants. Per 2001 Census Bangladeshi form the largest group of migrants in India followed by Pakistan.[1][2]

Demographics

Illegal Immigration

As per 2001 census there are 3,084,826 people in India who came from Bangladesh[1] No reliable numbers on illegal immigrants are currently available. Extrapolating the census data for the state of Assam alone gives a figure of 2 million.[3][4] Figures as high as 20 million are also reported in the government and media.[5][6] Samir Guha Roy of the Indian Statistical Institute called these estimates "motivatedly exaggerated". After examining the population growth and demographic statistics, Roy instead states that while a vast majority are illegal immigrants, significant numbers of internal migration is sometimes falsely thought to be immigrants. An analysis of the numbers by Roy revealed that on average around 91000 Bangladeshis illegal crossed over to India every year during the years 1981-1991[7]

The trip to India from Bangladesh is one of the cheapest in the world, with a trip costing around Rs.2000 (around $30 US), which includes the fee for the "Tour Operator". As Bangladeshi are cultural similar to the Bengali people in India, they are able to pass off as Indian citizens and settle down in any part of India to establish a far better future than they could in Bangladesh,[8] for a very small price. This false identity can be bolstered with false documentation available for as little as Rs.200 ($3 US) can even make them part of the vote bank.[7]

Most of the Bengali speaking people deported from Maharashtra as illegal immigrants are originally Indian citizens from West Bengal. Police would demand 2000-2500 from each of the detained Bengali speaking people for their release. If they fail to pay that amount, they are kept behind the bar for 10–15 days following which they would be taken to border and pushed into Bangladesh.[7]

The Bangladesh Liberation War and continued political and economic turmoil in Bangladesh in the following decades forced some Bangladeshis to seek refuge in India. During the Bangladesh Liberation War at least 10 million Bangladeshis crossed into India illegal to seek refuge from widespread rape and genocide.[8] Most of them migrated to the border states, particularly West Bengal and Assam.[4] This issue became more visible after the 1991 census when patterns of abnormally high growth rate of Muslims were observed in the border states Assam and West Bengal. In 1991 census Muslim population growth rates in these states were found to be much higher than the growth rates of the local Hindu population even after adjusting for the usual higher growth rate of Muslims observed throughout the country.[3][4][9] See the following tables for detail.[3][4][9][10][11][12]

Period % Growth during 1971-1991[4] % Growth during 1991-2001
Groups Muslims Hindus Difference Muslims Hindus Difference
Assam 41.89 35.42 5.53 14.95 9.3 4.35
All India 93.25 23.04 60.79 70 19.3 5.3
Period % Growth during 1981-1991 % Growth during 1991-2001
Groups Muslims Hindus Difference Muslims Hindus Difference
West Bengal 61.05 13.67 45.62 64.26 16.1 51.84
All India 52.8 22.9 30.1 50 20.3 29.3

Burmese immigrants

There are estimated 50,000-100,000 Burmese Chin immigrants residing in India, mostly in the Indian state of Mizoram and a small number is found in Delhi.[13][14][15]

Pakistani immigrants

India has hundreds of thousands of people from Pakistan, specially Hindu minorities.[16] The discrimination against Hindus has forced hundreds of thousands Hindus to cross from Sindh to Rajasthan and Gujarat.

Afghanistan immigrants

By 2009, India had over 13,000 illegal immigrants from Afghanistan.[16]

Political concerns over Bangladeshi illegal immigrants

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ABVP addressing about Bangladeshi illegals immigrants

Assam

In Assam, agitation against immigrants started as early as 1979, led by All Assam Students Union.[17] Their demand was to put a stop on the influx of immigrants and deportation of those who have already settled.[4] It gradually took violent form and ethnic violence started between Assamese and Bengalis, mostly Muslim. It eventually led to the infamous Nellie massacre in 1983 due to a controversy over the 1983 election.[18] In 1985 Indian Government signed the Assam accord with the leaders of the agitation to stop the issue.[4][19] As per the accord India started building a fence along the Assam-Bangladesh border which is now almost complete.[20] However, Assam also has a large number of genuine Indian Muslim Bengalis. It is difficult to distinguish between illegal Bangladeshis and local Bengali speakers.[21] In some cases, genuine Indian citizens have been discriminated[4][22] Allegations exist that nationalist parties such as the Bharatiya Janata Party as well as the Indian National Congress have discriminated against Bengali-speaking Muslims.[23] On the other hand, in some places reports of Bangladeshis being able to secure Indian ration and voter identity cards have come out.[24][25]

After 1991 census the changing demographic patterns in border districts became more visible.[3][4] It created anxiety and tension in India throughout the nineties. Both conservatives[26] as well as moderates[3] expressed concern on this issue. The first BJP government came into power in 1998 and subsequently ordered the construction of the Indo-Bangladesh barrier to stop migrants and illegal trade along the border. It was planned to enhance the already existing barrier in Assam and to encircle West Bengal, Tripura and Mizoram as well.[27][28][29]

West Bengal

The other Indian state affected by this problem, West Bengal, remained mostly calm during this period. However Indian newspapers reported that "the state government has reports that illegal Bangladeshi migrants have trickled into parts of rural Bengal, including Nandigram,[30] over the years, and settled down as sharecroppers with the help of local Left leaders. Though a majority of these immigrants became tillers, they lacked documents to prove the ownership of land.[30]"

The Government of Bangladesh has denied India's claims on illegal immigration.[31][32]

After 2001 census the anxiety somewhat reduced when the growth rates were found to have returned to near normal level, particularly in West Bengal, thus negating the fear that there was an unabated influx of migrants.[33][34] Although some concern remains.

Kerala

Lately, Bangladeshi illegal migrants have been moving to Kerala owing to the high wages for unskilled and semi-skilled laborers, and also the presence of sizable Muslim population in the state. The Kerala police are reportedly finding it difficult to check the influx of these Bangladeshi illegal migrants.[35] Kerala State Intelligence officials said they found that a large section of Migrant labourers in Kerala claiming to be from West Bengal were actually from Bangladesh.[36]

Higher judiciary's concerns over Bangaladeshi illegal immigrants

In 2005, a Supreme Court bench ruled Illegal Migrants (Determination by Tribunal) Act (IMDT) as unconstitutional while,[37] with reference to the Sinha Report,[38] maintained that the impact of the "aggression" represented by large-scale illegal migration from Bangladesh had made the life of the people of Assam "wholly insecure and the panic generated thereby had created fear psychosis" in other north-eastern States.[37] In August 2008, the Delhi High Court dismissed a petition by a Bangladeshi national against her deportation. The High Court ruled that the illegal Bangladeshi immigrants "pose a danger to India's internal security".[39]

Social concerns

Apart from immigrants a large numbers smugglers regularly cross the porous border along West Bengal into India.[40] They mainly engage in smuggling goods and livestock from India into Bangladesh to avoid high tariff imposed on some Indian goods by Bangladesh government.[40] Bangladeshi women and girls are also trafficked to India and via India to Middle East for forced labor and commercial sexual exploitation.[41] The Centre for Women and Children Studies estimated in 1998 that 27,000 Bangladeshis have been forced into prostitution in India.[42][43] According to CEDAW report, 1% of foreign prostitutes in India and 2.7% of prostitutes in Kolkata are from Bangladesh.[44]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Census of India 2001. Data Highlights: Migration Tables. Pg 19
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  5. 2 cr Bangladeshis in India: Fernandes Tribune India - 27 September 2003
  6. Illegal Bangladeshi Immigration
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  9. 9.0 9.1 Report by Sachar Committee, Appendix tables 3.1-3.5, Page:271-278
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  11. Manorama yearbook 1998
  12. Manorama yearbook 2008
  13. India: Close The gap for Burmese refugees
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  17. From 1979 to 1985: The Anti-Foreigners Movement in Assam
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  19. Full text of the accord
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  23. Making a 'menace' of migrants, Vir Sanghvi The Nation - 6 January 2006
  24. 22 illegal immigrants from Bangladesh held The Hindu - 9 October 2007
  25. Anandabazar Patrika, Bengali daily, Calcutta, 8 March 1995.
  26. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  27. Ministry of Home Affairs, Annual Report 2009-2010, p: 28
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  32. The Bengal Borderland: Beyond State and Nation in South Asia By Willem van Schendel, Published 2005, Anthem Press
  33. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  35. Bangladeshi migrants giving cops the jitters Times of India Nov 10, 2011, 07.45PM IST
  36. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  37. 37.0 37.1 IMDT Act is the biggest barrier to deportation, says Supreme Court, The Hindu
  38. act arouses aggression: SC, Times of India
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  40. 40.0 40.1 World bank report
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  42. Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, Factbook on Global Sexual Exploitation, Donna M. Hughes, Laura Joy Sporcic, Nadine Z. Mendelsohn and Vanessa Chirgwin
  43. Trafficking in Bangladeshi Women and Girls, by Bimal Kanti Paul; Syed Abu Hasnath, Geographical Review, p.268-276, April 2000
  44. Third and fourth periodic reports of States parties, COMMITTEE ON THE ELIMINATION OF DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN, UNITED NATIONS

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