Mamata
File photo of West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee.

Irrespective of the West Bengal Chief Minister, Mamata Banerjee, crying foul over 40 lakh people being excluded from the final draft of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) in Assam which got published on July 30 last, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) threw the gauntlet at her on Tuesday by saying that a similar exercise would be conducted in West Bengal to “kick out illegal Bangladeshi immigrants” if BJP was voted to power in the State.

The statement came after Mamata Banerjee, slammed the Centre and said the NRC was making people “refugees in their own country.” As many as 4 million people were left out of the second and final draft published on Monday out of 32.9 million, who had applied for inclusion in the NRC.

A Hindustan Times report quoted the BJP National Secretary, Rahul Sinha, as saying, “Mamata Banerjee is unnecessarily muddying the waters. The Assam Government is not targeting bonafide citizens,”

Earlier, Mamata Banerjee, on Monday lashed out at the Centre over the draft National Register of Citizens (NRC), which she claimed was aimed at evicting Bengalis and Biharis from Assam.

She said she would send a team of her Trinamool Congress (TMC) MPs to Assam while the BJP warned it would replicate the exercise to throw out illegal “Bangladeshi immigrants” if it comes to power in Bengal.

The report further stated that as many as four million people were left out of the second and final draft published on Monday out of 32.9 million, who had applied for inclusion in the NRC.

“We are worried because people are being made refugees in their own country. It is a plan to throw out Bengali-speaking people and Biharis. Consequences will be felt in our State also,” Banerjee said at a press conference in Kolkata. “As many as four million Bengalis have been declared non-Indians. Bengal and Assam share borders. Other states would not be as adversely affected as Bengal. Bengal and Bangladesh will be the most affected.”

When asked whether her Government would offer shelter to those left out of NRC, she said, “We will give it a thought. But let me ask, why would they be thrown out in the first place?” She called for a law to protect those left out.

“What will happen, if they want to push them back and if Bangladesh does not want to take them back? Parliament must legislate to protect these human beings.”

Banerjee claimed people with documents like voter cards, passports, bank accounts and Aadhaar cards have not been recognised as citizens.

She said she would speak to the Union Home Minister, Rajnath Singh. “There is a UN resolution to give shelter to refugees in distress,” she said. “They are settled in Assam with businesses and establishments. How can they be excluded? They have been staying there for decades, even for 50 to 100 years.”

Banerjee blamed the Centre for creating “unnecessary provocation” although the Supreme Court has monitored the NRC exercise. “The court is not to be blamed. The Government of India did not oppose it. Why did not the Centre legislate to protect them? They are creating an unnecessary provocation.”