Going Nowhere

Tamils have lived in India for decades but now they have been
made non-citizens in a land which they considered their own.

By Samia Shah | April 2020


Around 100,000 Sri Lankan Tamil refugees have been excluded from the Citizen Amendment Act (CAA) 2019. The law, what some call discriminatory, has triggered a torrent of criticism.

It is not only considered biased towards Muslims but it has also ignored the plight of thousands of Sri Lankan refugees living in Tamil Nadu’s camps or outside the camps. These Lankan refugees have been part of India for the last three generations. These 100,000 immigrants, most of whom are Hindus of Sri Lankan origin, have been leading miserable lives.

There are about 460,000 repatriations on record from Sri Lanka to India, out of which 20 percent claimed Indian citizenship on the basis of their Sri Lankan birth certificates in order to seek asylum in India. These people are marked as Indian Tamils on their birth certificates as their grandparents belonged to India and they were moved to Sri Lanka by the British colonial administration where they were forced to work in tea plantation. These people had no citizenship of either country so they were given a chance to acquire the one under an agreement signed in 1964 between the then prime minister of India Laal Bahadur Shastri and his Sri Lankan counterpart Shri Mavo Bandarnikay.

When the agreement was signed, around 975,000 people of Indian origin were living in Sri Lanka. After 1983 India refused to offer citizenship to Sri Lankan Tamils, arguing that they were not Indians. New Delhi asserted that these were the Tamils of Sri Lankan origin who fled the Island state to save their lives after the violent turn followed by a series of anti-Tamil riots. Indian media also supported the position of their government claiming these refugees have no right to get Indian nationality as they were not the sons of the soil.

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