City
Epaper

Assam to speed up deportation of illegal immigrants by using 1950 law: CM Sarma

By IANS | Updated: June 9, 2025 13:43 IST

Guwahati, June 9 Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Monday asserted that the government would speed up ...

Open in App

Guwahati, June 9 Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma on Monday asserted that the government would speed up the process of deporting illegal immigrants from the state to safeguard the indigenous community.

While speaking at the Assembly, CM Sarma said, “The state government is set to use the 1950 law to expel the illegal immigrants here. The apex Court of the country has also given a nod regarding this. The administrative machinery will work accordingly to make Assam free from illegal immigrants.”

The Chief Minister also pressed for safeguarding the interests of Assamese people. He said, “I am an Assamese first and a Chief Minister later.”

The Assam government has decided to invoke a little-known law from 1950 -- the Immigrants (Expulsion from Assam) Order -- to fast-track the deportation of undocumented immigrants, bypassing the usual judicial process.

Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma announced the shift earlier, stating that the identification and removal of "foreigners" would now proceed at a faster pace after slowing down due to complications surrounding the National Register of Citizens (NRC).

“This time, if someone is identified as a foreigner, we will not have to approach the foreigners’ tribunal to initiate a pushback,” CM Sarma said.

Referring to a previous Supreme Court hearing on Section 6A of the Citizenship Act, he added that the court had clarified that the Assam government is not obligated to seek judicial approval for every deportation.

He pointed to the Immigrants Expulsion Order, enacted in 1950, which he claimed grants district commissioners (DCs) the authority to issue deportation orders without judicial intervention. “Our lawyers had not informed us about this provision earlier. We recently became aware of it, and we are now taking it seriously,” he said.

The Chief Minister confirmed that deportations have already begun under the renewed approach, though individuals with pending cases in court have not yet been affected.

The move marks a departure from the long-standing process involving foreigners’ tribunals -- quasi-judicial bodies responsible for determining the status of suspected undocumented immigrants. Until now, individuals declared as “foreigners” by the tribunals had the right to challenge the verdict in the High Court and the Supreme Court.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIranian delegation led by Parliament Speaker Qalibaf arrives in Islamabad for talks with US

BusinessCommerce Ministry, Ports Department review packaging and shipping challenges amid West Asia crisis

Other Sports'Vaiball' takes over IPL 2026: 15-yr-old Sooryavanshi stuns cricket world with explosive knock

Cricket"Everyone loves him": RR skipper Riyan Parag on Vaibhav Sooryavanshi after RR's win over RCB

Cricket"I try to play the ball and not the bowler": Orange Cap holder Vaibhav Sooryavanshi after POTM-winning performance against RCB

National Realted Stories

National132 devotees from Ludhiana had come for 'darshan', says DM CP Singh on Mathura boat accident

NationalAI Summit protest case: Court grants interim protection to IYC member, directs him to join investigation

NationalTripura emerges fastest-growing economies in NE, attracts Rs 2,000 cr investment interest at Bengaluru conclave

NationalUGC secretary Manish Joshi to be relieved; Shyama Rath to take charge

National'Only expert status, no right to conduct technical review': UK regulator responds to families over Air India crash probe