Bangladesh seeks list of illegal Bangladeshis in India
Dhaka, Dec 16: Bangladesh foreign minister A K Abdul Momen on Sunday said his country has requested India to provide a list of any Bangladesh nationals living illegally in the country and it will allow them to return.
Responding to a question on India's National Register of Citizenship (NRC), Momen, who cancelled his visit to India on Thursday citing his busy schedule, said Bangladesh-India relations are normal and "very sweet" and they will not be affected.
He said India has termed the NRC process as its internal matter and assured Dhaka that it would not affect Bangladesh.
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He rejected speculation of "pushback" attempts by India, saying some Indian nationals are illegally entering Bangladesh through middlemen due to economic reasons.
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"But if anybody other than our citizens enters Bangladesh, we will send them back," he told media here when asked about reports that some people are illegally entering the country through borders with India.
Momen said Bangladesh has requested New Delhi to provide a list of Bangladeshis living illegally in India, "if any", to be repatriated.
"We will allow them (Bangladesh citizens) as they have the right to enter into their own country," he said.
Asked why he cancelled his India visit, the minister said his busy schedule coinciding with the Martyred Intellectuals Day and Victory Day and also the absence of the state minister for foreign affairs Shahriar Alam and the ministry's secretary in the country made him defer his tour.
Diplomatic sources in New Delhi had said that Momen and home minister Asaduzzaman Khan cancelled their visits to India over the situation arising out of the passage of the controversial Citizenship (Amendment) Bill in Parliament.
Momen cancelled his tour a day after he termed as "untrue" home minister Amit Shah's comments on the persecution of religious minorities in Bangladesh.
The external affairs ministry in New Delhi had said that Momen conveyed to India about the postponement of his visit due to scheduling issues, and asserted that Shah referred to religious persecution in Bangladesh during the military rule and not under the current government.
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Bangladesh was learnt to have been upset the following rollout of the NRC in Assam around four months ago even though India conveyed to it that the issue was an internal matter of the country.
The
NRC
has
been
prepared
to
identify
genuine
Indian
citizens
living
in
Assam
since
March
24,
1971,
or
before,
and
identify
illegal
Bangladeshi
migrants
in
the
state.
Out
of
3.3
crore
applicants,
over
19
lakh
people
were
excluded
from
the
final
NRC
published
on
August
30.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina had taken up the issue of NRC with Prime Minister Narendra Modi during their bilateral meeting in New York in September.