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Verification drive: 4 holding centres emptied in Gurgaon, cops to restrict detentions to confirmed foreign nationals

Verification drive: 4 holding centres emptied in Gurgaon, cops to restrict detentions to confirmed foreign nationals

Indian Express26-07-2025
Four community centres in Gurgaon will no longer be used as holding facilities for Bengali-speaking migrant workers suspected of being Bangladeshi or Rohingya. The Gurgaon Police said it will only look at confirmed foreign nationals and individuals under strong suspicion.
The four centres were at Badshahpur, Sector 10A, Sector 40, and Sector 1 in Manesar. A police spokesperson on Friday said the centres have been emptied.
'We have identified 10 Bangladeshis (staying here illegally) from those kept at the holding centres. The deportation process is already underway for seven of them,' Gurgaon Deputy Commissioner of Police (Headquarters), Dr Arpit Jain, told The Indian Express on Saturday.
Dr Jain added that while the detention of suspected foreigners at these centres has been paused for now, the verification drive is ongoing. 'Now, only those confirmed to be Bangladeshis, or those under strong suspicion of being foreign nationals, will be detained and taken to these centres pending verification,' he said.
Asked about the total number of men kept at the centres, he said many had been brought in across the week and several were released the same day or within a day or two.
The men were released once the local district magistrate in their hometown confirmed the validity of their documents.
Over the past week, several migrant workers — mostly daily-wage labourers — were rounded up by the police as part of the drive, sparking panic among the Bengali-speaking migrant community and prompting many to leave the city. Families had claimed they had valid documentation — Aadhaar, PAN and ration cards and voter IDs — but the police were refusing to let their loved ones go.
The move also left housing societies that depended on them for sanitation services struggling in terms of door-to-door waste collection.
The police operations began after a letter from the Union Home Ministry, directing state governments to prepare a standard operating procedure to deport, in sufficient numbers, Bangladeshis and Rohingya staying illegally.
'… if any illegal foreign national is found living in any state/district, he will be detained and kept in a Special Holding Centre… the police is conducting special search operations for illegal foreign nationals to maintain law and order and peace in district Gurugram, for which Special Holding Centres have been acquired vide letter… dated 18.07.2025 of this office,' read a July 22 order from District Magistrate.
The police spokesperson on Saturday also asked citizens not to spread misinformation regarding alleged torture and violence on the part of the police during the operation. 'There is a lot of wrong information being shared online. So far, we have not received any such complaint; posts alleging torture are not genuine.'
On the background of the 10 men found to be Bangladeshi, he said it is a part of the investigation, and further information cannot be shared at this stage.
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