NEW DELHI: India’s lower house passed a bill on Tuesday that would grant citizenship to members of certain religious minorities but not Muslims, sparking protests in the country’s northeast.

The Lok Sabha bill covers select groups — including Hindus, Christians and Sikhs — who moved from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan and who have lived in India for at least six years.

Muslims are excluded, in what critics say is a transparent pitch by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to voters as India gears up for elections due by May.

The legislation, which still needs approval in the upper house, sparked a second day of protests on Tuesday in the northeastern state of Assam, where millions have settled in recent decades after fleeing neighbouring countries.

Demonstrators in the state are angry about the bill not because it excludes Muslims, but because it grants citizenship to settlers from elsewhere, accusing the migrants of taking away jobs from indigenous groups.

The hilly state of 33 million people, known for its tea plantations, has been plagued for decades by tensions between tribal and ethnic indigenous groups and settlers from outside the region.

Last year the Assam government published a draft citizens’ register that left off four million people unable to prove they were living there before 1971.

A deadline to provide documents to be included in the registry passed on Dec 31, and the final list is due to be published on June 30.

In Tuesday’s protests in Assam, the militant North East Students Organsation (NESO) vandalised offices of Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and set banners and posters on fire. A leader of the organisation said people in the region would not “accept the political injustice perpetrated by the BJP”.

Police said that protesters threw stones at officers.

“We have identified the stone pelters by seeing video footage and they will be booked soon,” a police official said.

On Monday a small party in the BJP-led coalition in Assam, the Asom Gana Parishad (AGP), walked out of the alliance in protest against the bill, saying it would lead to an influx of Bangladeshi Hindus.

Published in Dawn, January 9th, 2019

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