The one-man Upamanyu Hazarika Commission, set up by Supreme Court, submitted its report on October 5 to the Court which has directed both the Central and Assam governments to respond to the recommendations within four weeks for hearing on November 5.
Undertaking extensive tours of the Indo-Bangladesh border in Assam, the Hazarika Commission suggested creation of a 'Sterile Zone' by demarcating/identifying a particular stretch from the international boundary in the riverine area and provision of identity cards to villagers there.
Observing that the primary reason for illegal migration is hunger for land, the Commission recommended that there should be a restriction in the transfer of land - whether by way of sale, purchase, gift or any other such transaction, or by way of allotment from the government or any other agency - only to those who have been citizens of India in the year 1951 and their descendants.
The report claimed that the foreigners acquired land "through all means, the favourite mode being to pose as flood and erosion affected persons from other districts with the aid and assistance of a complicit and corrupt administration".
The big influx over the years has created a huge immigration population which competes for jobs, in government institutions with Indian citizens, without verification of the antecedents of such non-Indians, the Commission noted and suggested that the same benchmark for transfer of land be adopted to be an effective deterrent for any illegal migrant and protection of indigenous inhabitants.
