Centre Sets Up Two State-Level Panels in West Bengal for Citizenship Applications

The Ministry of Home Affairs has constituted two state-level empowered committees in West Bengal to process citizenship applications. These committees are part of the administrative framework established under Section 6B of the Citizenship Act. The panels include officers from central intelligence, foreigner registration, postal services, and state informatics. The move aims to ensure structured scrutiny and coordination for applications under the amended citizenship law.

Key Points: MHA Constitutes Citizenship Panels in West Bengal Under CAA

  • Two state-level committees formed
  • Headed by central govt deputy secretary-level officers
  • Part of framework under Citizenship Act Section 6B
  • Includes reps from IB, FRRO, NIC, Postal dept
4 min read

MHA constitutes two state-level empowered committees in West Bengal to process citizenship applications

The MHA has formed two state-level empowered committees in West Bengal to process citizenship applications under Section 6B of the Citizenship Act.

"aimed at ensuring structured scrutiny and inter-departmental coordination - Officials"

By Rajnish Singh, New Delhi, March 2

The Central government on Monday strengthened the institutional mechanism for processing citizenship applications in West Bengal by constituting two state-level empowered committees under the Citizenship Rules, 2009, as part of the framework laid down under Section 6B of the Citizenship Act, 1955.

As per an order issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), the committees will be headed by officers not below the rank of deputy secretary to the Central government, and these officers will be nominated by the Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India.

Each empowered committee will comprise an officer in the Subsidiary Intelligence Bureau not below the rank of under secretary to the Central government, an officer not below the rank of under secretary to the Central government to be nominated by the jurisdictional Foreigners Regional Registration officer concerned, an officer not below the rank of under secretary to the Central government to be nominated by the State Informatics Officer of the National Informatics Centre of the state of West Bengal, the post master general of the state of West Bengal, or a postal officer nominated by the post master general not below the rank of under secretary to the Central government.

In addition to the designated members, certain officials will participate as invitees to the empowered committees. These include a representative from the office of the Principal Secretary (Home) or the Additional Chief Secretary (Home) of the government of West Bengal and a representative of the jurisdictional Divisional Railway Manager of the Railways.

The order further clarifies that all other terms and conditions will remain the same as those provided in the earlier notification issued by the Ministry of Home Affairs dated March 11, 2024.

Officials said the constitution of these empowered committees forms part of the administrative mechanism laid down under the Citizenship Act and the accompanying rules for processing applications and related matters under Section 6B. They also said the move is "aimed at ensuring structured scrutiny and inter-departmental coordination in handling cases under the specified provisions of the law."

The order states that "the decision has been taken in exercise of the powers conferred under sub-section (1) of Section 6B of the Citizenship Act, 1955 (57 of 1955), read with sub-rules (1) and (3) of Rule 11A of the Citizenship Rules, 2009."

The constitution of the committee is part of the procedural framework under Section 6B of the Citizenship Act, which relates to the processing and grant of citizenship applications under specified provisions of the amended law.

Section 6B was inserted into the Citizenship Act, 1955, through the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 (CAA). The amendment provides a pathway to Indian citizenship for members of Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi and Christian communities who migrated to India from Pakistan, Bangladesh and Afghanistan before December 31, 2014, due to religious persecution.

To operationalise the law, the Centre notified detailed rules in March 2024 outlining the application process, scrutiny mechanism, and the role of district-level and state-level authorities.

The Empowered Committees are key bodies responsible for examining applications, verifying documents, and making recommendations regarding the grant of citizenship.

West Bengal, which shares a long international border with Bangladesh and has historically witnessed migration flows, is considered one of the key states where applications under Section 6B are expected.

The formation of these committees ensures administrative coordination between intelligence agencies, census authorities, foreign registration officials, postal authorities and state representatives for verification and due diligence.

Last month, the MHA had also constituted an empowered committee for West Bengal for processing and granting of citizenship applications under specified provisions of the amended law. The committee will be headed by the Deputy Registrar General, Directorate of Census Operations, West Bengal.

It will comprise senior officers from key central agencies, including: an officer from the Subsidiary Intelligence Bureau not below the rank of Deputy Secretary to the Government of India; an officer not below the rank of Under Secretary, nominated by the jurisdictional Foreigners Regional Registration Officer (FRRO); an officer not below the rank of Under Secretary, nominated by the State Informatics Officer of the National Informatics Centre (NIC), West Bengal; the Postmaster General of West Bengal or a Postal Officer nominated by the Postmaster General, not below the rank of Deputy Secretary to the Government of India.

Additionally, representatives from the office of the Principal Secretary (Home) or Additional Chief Secretary (Home) of the West Bengal government, and a representative of the jurisdictional Divisional Railway Manager, will serve as invitees to the committee.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While the intent to help persecuted minorities is good, I hope the process is transparent, fair, and swift. The committees must work efficiently to avoid long delays for people who have already suffered so much. 🤞
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Rohit P
Good move. Including officers from Intelligence Bureau, NIC, Postal, and State Home dept will create a robust verification system. This should prevent any misuse. Jai Hind!
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Sarah B
The article is very detailed on the committee structure, but I'm curious about the actual timeline for applicants. How long will the entire process take from application to decision? That's the key question for many families.
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Meera T
With respect, I hope this doesn't become another bureaucratic hurdle. We have seen how slow government committees can be. The focus should be on compassionate and speedy processing, not just creating layers of administration.
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Vikram M
Finally, some concrete steps on the ground. The inclusion of the Railways representative is interesting – probably for verifying travel/route details of migrants. Smart. This is about giving a home to those who have none, a core Indian value.

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