THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - May 15, 2018 - Topic 1
In Assam, where illegal
migration, in fact as well as in exaggeration, has defined the political
landscape since the 1980s, public hearings and meetings held by a Joint
Parliamentary Committee over the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill, 2016, have
inevitably taken place in a charged atmosphere. Parties and civil society
groups have argued that the Bill provides legitimacy to Hindus who have
migrated from Bangladesh post-1971. It precludes individuals from six religious
minorities from three “Muslim-dominant countries” (Afghanistan, Bangladesh and
Pakistan) from being defined as “illegal immigrants” under the Foreigners Act,
1946.
The intent behind this Bill, promised by the BJP in the run-up to the
2014 general election, is to clear a path to citizenship for minorities
persecuted in the three countries. The National Register of Citizens, on the
other hand, does not distinguish migrants on the basis of religion and regards
all post-March 24, 1971 migrants, irrespective of their religion, as illegal
aliens who need to be deported. Clearly, the Bill is seen by detractors to be
breaking the general consensus on the NRC forged after years of political
differences and legal challenges to the Assam Accord, of which the ongoing
exercise to update the register is an outcome. Chief Minister Sarbananda
Sonowal has responded saying his government will continue to protect the rights
of the citizens, and hinted that the JPC should take the detractors’ views on
board.
The Bill is indeed
discriminatory and problematic in limiting accelerated citizenship to
non-Muslims. As the case of the Rohingya highlights, Muslims in neighbouring
countries who are fleeing persecution are being denied refuge in India
currently. Besides, the detractors, although some of their objections stem from
a native chauvinism, have a point. The Bill conflates the definition of
migrants, people who shift voluntarily, with that of refugees, who are forced
to do so under duress giving them a claim to humanitarian protection. The NRC
puts the onus on migrants to prove their status of residence prior to 1971
based on a series of documents that would lead to registration as a citizen.
The Bill seeks to bring in considerations of religious identity. There are
unresolved issues with the NRC process as well. There is the question of
modalities of deportation, which would involve negotiations with Bangladesh. As
of now Assam has six detention centres for illegal migrants. If the NRC process
identifies more illegal aliens for deportation, they would have to be detained
in such centres and there is no knowing how long they would have to stay there.
Besides, the implementation of the Bill will mean non-Muslims will not be
subject to these steps, thereby clearly discriminating against Muslims
identified as illegal aliens. The Centre needs to apply much more thought
before pushing the Bill, for its contradictions in Assam and for its larger
religious assumptions.
Vocabulary
Migration: movement from one part of something to another.
Example: There is virtually no cell migration in plants
Exaggeration: a statement that represents something as better or
worse than it really is.
Example: It would be an exaggeration to say I had morning
sickness, but I did feel queasy
Synonyms: overstatement, overemphasis, magnification, amplification
Inevitably: as is certain to happen.
Example: Inevitably some details are already out of date
Synonyms: naturally, necessarily, automatically, as
a matter of course, of necessity
Legitimacy: conformity to the law or to rules.
Example: Refusal to recognize the legitimacy of both governments
Intent: resolved or determined to do something
Example: The administration was intent on achieving greater
efficiency
Synonyms: bent on, set on, insistent
on, hell-bent on, committed to, obsessive about
Distinguish: recognize or treat someone or something as
different.
Example: The child is perfectly capable of distinguishing reality
from fantasy
Synonyms: differentiate, tell apart, discriminate
between, tell the difference between
Exercise: activity requiring physical effort, carried out
especially to sustain or Example: improve
health and fitness.
Exercise improves your heart and lung
power
Synonyms: physical activity, working
out, gymnastics, sports, games
Detractor: a person who disparages someone or something.
Example: Of course, detractors and critics emerged instantaneously
out of the woodwork.
Synonyms: critic, disparager, denigrator, deprecator, belittler, attacker, fault-finder
Persecution: hostility and ill-treatment, especially because of
race or political or religious beliefs.
Example: Her family fled religious persecution
Synonyms: oppression, victimization, maltreatment, mistreatment, abuse
Chauvinism: exaggerated or aggressive patriotism.
Example: Public opinion was easily moved to chauvinism and
nationalism
Refugee: a person who has been forced to leave their country
in order to escape war, persecution, or natural disaster.
Example: Tens of thousands of refugees fled their homes
Synonyms: émigré, fugitive, exile, displaced
person, asylum seeker, boat people
Consideration: careful thought, typically over a period of time.
Example: A long process involving a great deal of careful
consideration
Synonyms: thought, deliberation, reflection, contemplation, rumination
Involve: a situation or event include something as a
necessary part or result.
Example: His transfer to another school would involve a lengthy
assessment procedure
Synonyms: require, necessitate, demand, call
for, entail, mean
Contradiction: a combination of statements, ideas, or features of
a situation that are opposed to one another.
Example: The proposed new system suffers from a set of internal
contradictions
Assumption: a thing that is accepted as true or as certain to
happen, without proof.
Example: They made certain assumptions about the market
Synonyms: supposition, presumption, belief, expectation, conjecture, speculation
