
ECI invites TIPRA Motha delegation to discuss illegal migrant issue
Motha founder and Tripura royal scion Pradyot Kishore Debbarman, revealing the development here today, said that he has been fighting consistently for the safe future of the indigenous people of the state beyond communities. But in recent years, infiltration from Bangladesh and Myanmar has emerged as the biggest threat to Tripura.
The settlers of both tribal and non-tribal since the accession of Tripura with the Indian Union in October 1949 are the indigenous in the state, and thereafter, before the creation of Bangladesh in 1971, they were also considered the legal settlers of the state. Whoever crossed over to Tripura after March 1971, as per Indian law, are illegal immigrants, and somehow they managed to stay in the state, thereby creating a problem for the genuine citizens.
However, soon after the creation of Bangladesh in 1971, the Indian government had issued an order to all the states and territorial governments to flush out illegal immigrants, but it didn't work in Tripura. Thereafter, in 2017 and 2021, similar orders were issued, but the then left front and BJP governments, respectively, neither made it public nor executed the orders.
The Ministry of Home Affairs, on May 19 this year, issued directives to all the state governments following the Pahalgam incident to identify illegal migrants and deport them to their respective countries. Accordingly, Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Haryana have started implementing the order.
Tripura has also formed a special task force to deal with illegal migrants and prevent infiltration. To identify the illegal migrants and their deportation, TIPRA Motha has launched a sustained campaign at the community level and demanded that the ECI go for an extensive revision of the electoral roll like Bihar.
Following persuasion, ECI invited a delegation of TIPRA Motha to discuss the issue. Terming it a 'huge victory,' Pradyot asserted that ECI's invitation validates the concerns repeatedly raised by his party over the demographic and security implications of unchecked cross-border migration.
'We are trying to protect our next generation and looking beyond party politics. This is not just a fight of the TIPRA Motha party but of every Indian,' Pradyot said, adding that he also made a passionate appeal to rise above party politics and stand united against illegal migration, emphasising the need for a collective and nationalistic approach to the issue rather than treating it as a political agenda.
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