Govt sets NPR in action, Amit Shah says it has nothing to do with NRC

<p>The Union Cabinet on Tuesday approved fund allocation for updating the National Population Register (NPR), putting the official stamp on a revised pan-India list of “usual residents”, but attempted to distance the exercise from the controversial National Register of Citizens (NRC). The government said NPR would be linked to the 2021 Census, and would not […]</p>

New Update
Govt sets NPR in action, Amit Shah says it has nothing to do with NRC
Advertisment

The Union
Cabinet on Tuesday approved fund allocation for updating the National
Population Register (NPR), putting the official stamp on a revised pan-India
list of “usual residents”, but attempted to distance the exercise from the
controversial National Register of Citizens (NRC).

Advertisment

The
government said NPR would be linked to the 2021 Census, and would not require a
documentation process on the lines of the recently concluded NRC in Assam.

A “usual
resident” for the purposes of NPR is defined as a person who has lived in a
local area for the past six months or more, or a person who intends to live in
that area for at least the next six months. Unlike NRC, which is a citizenship
enumeration drive, NPR also includes foreigners staying in a locality for more
than six months.

“No
biometric, no proof or documents need to be given for NPR. We trust our people
and so, self-certification will be sufficient in NPR,” said Union information
and broadcasting minister Prakash Javadekar, while announcing that the Cabinet
approved Rs 8,754.23 crore for the Census of India 2021 and Rs 3,941.35 crore
for the updation of NPR.

Later, in an
interview, Union home minister Amit Shah categorically said that NPR is not
related to NRC and the data of NPR would not be used in NRC.

He also disapproved
allegations that the Narendra Modi-led government is constructing detention
centres and said that the amended citizenship act can only provide the same to
a person but can’t snatch away citizenship.

The
Opposition, however, described the process as the first step towards a
nationwide NRC, a proposed exercise that has led to mass protests across the
country over the past two weeks, particularly over its possible link with
recent amendments to the citizenship law.

 Two chief ministers, Mamata Bannerjee of West
Bengal and Pinarayi Vijayan of Kerala suspended the NPR updation process this
month on these grounds.

To underline
the contrast between NPR and NRC, Javadekar said: “No biometric, no proof or
documents need to be given for NPR. We trust our people and so,
self-certification will be sufficient in NPR.”

According to
a note issued in July by the office of the Registrar General and Census
Commissioner, India, under the aegis of the ministry of home affairs (MHA),
“the objective of NPR is to create a comprehensive identity database of every
usual resident in the country”.

The process
for NPR was first explained in 2003, when the central government issued the
Citizenship (Registration of Citizens and Issue of National Identity Cards)
Rules.

Latest Stories