Congress group to discuss NRC, citizenship Bill

Centre may move legislation

October 25, 2019 02:16 am | Updated November 01, 2019 08:39 pm IST - New Delhi

Sonia Gandhi. File photo: PTI

Sonia Gandhi. File photo: PTI

At its very first meeting, a policy group formed by interim Congress president Sonia Gandhi to discuss the party’s position on various controversial issues will take up the upcoming Citizenship Amendment Bill. The party has also constituted another group of leaders from North East and State in-charges of North East to discuss the National Register for Citizens (NRC).

Both the meetings are scheduled for Friday.

The Congress has been unable to navigate the tricky issue of NRC and Citizenship Amendment Bill (CAB) that are closely interlinked, with varying voices within the party on the subjects. The party wants to be prepared well in time for the winter session of Parliament when the BJP government is expected to move the legislation.

 

The policy group has among its members Manmohan Singh, Rahul Gandhi, Ahmed Patel, Ghulam Nabi Azad, A.K. Antony, Mallikarjun Kharge, Anand Sharma, Jairam Ramesh, Ambika Soni, Kapil Sibal, Adhir Ranjan Chaudhary, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra and K.C. Venugopal. The meeting comes a day after results of the Maharashtra and Haryana assembly polls and the post-poll situation in the two States will also be up for deliberations.

The second committee to discuss NRC has former Assam MP Sushmita Dev; in-charges of North Eastern States Luizinho Falerio and Gaurav Gogoi; former president of West Bengal PCC Adhir Ranjan Choudhary; Rajya Sabha MP Ripun Bora; former Meghalaya Chief Minister Mukul Sangma; Nagaland PCC president Kewekhape Therie; and former Chief Minister of Mizoram Lal Tanhawala among others.

State units back NRC

Party units in Meghalya, Arunachal Pradesh and Mizoram have supported NRC. Recently, the Pradesh Congress Committee president of Tripura, Pradyot Debbarma, quit the party on this very issue. He was rallying in support of NRC in the State.

The party is in principle opposed to the Citizenship Amendment Bill, but its leaders seem disagree on what exactly its stand should be. “The Citizenship Amendment Bill will benefit the Hindus in Assam, West Bengal and north eastern States. So if we oppose all guns blazing we will be seen at odds to a huge group of voters. We have to set our line on the issue and this can be done only when we listen to all the stakeholders,” a top Congress leader said.

In previous Lok Sabha, all the four Congress members of a select committee that reviewed the CAB — Adhir Ranjan Chaudhary, Sushmita Dev, Pradeep Bhattacharya and Bhubaneshwar Kalita (who shifted to BJP) — had submitted dissent notes.

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