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Mahanta accused of double standards
By Our Staff Correspondent
GUWAHATI, JUNE 29. The Assam PCC chief, Mr. Tarun Gogoi, today
criticised the Mahanta Government for ordering the police to
serve `quit India' notices in a systematic manner on a large
number of Bengali Hindus in various parts of the State, calling
them `illegal migrants' from Bangladesh, though they were all
Indian citizens.
He said the Congress MPs from Assam would raise the issue in the
coming monsoon session of Parliament. The matter will also be
taken with the Prime Minister and the Home Minister.
Mr. Gogoi accused the Chief Minister, Mr. Mahanta, of adopting
`double standards' and resorting to `double-speak' on the issue
of repealing the Illegal Migrants (Determination by Tribunals) or
IM(DT) Act.
In an interview to a local newspaper, Mr. Mahanta has been quoted
as saying: ``We have been repeatedly writing to (the Centre) to
get the IM(DT) Act scrapped. We have never taken any other
position on the issue. Yes, we have scrupulously avoided
publicity on this because we strongly feel that publicizing it
will not help solve the question. On the contrary it will
complicate matters.''
Referring to the interview, Mr. Gogoi said Mr. Mahanta had been
publicly stating all these years that the IM(DT) Act was a
Central law and it was for the Centre to retain or repeal it but
as the Chief Minister he would protect the minorities whether the
Act remained or not. He had never publicly pleaded for repealing
the Act.
Mr. Gogoi said now it appeared Mr. Mahanta was saying one thing
in public and another to the Centre.
He said one thing for the consumption of the minority voters
while his advice to the Centre was just the opposite.
Meanwhile, a specific case of deporting Indian citizens was
reported by Mr. Animesh Mazumdar, joint convener of the Forum for
Linguistic Minorities.
Four Bengali Hindus of Sonapur, about 28 kms from Guwahati, were
served with quit India notices a week ago, then brought to the
Panbazar police station here and next day pushed into Bangladesh
from the Mankachar border in south Assam.
Mr. Mazumdar said three of them had already come back, while the
fourth was yet untraced.
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