ssam has “pushed back” 33 illegal Bangladeshi infiltrators as part of its ongoing drive against illegal immigration. (Photo | Special arrangement)
India

Assam pushes back 33 Bangladeshi infiltrators as part of intensified crackdown

Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma said that the state government’s efforts to tackle infiltration would be further intensified in the coming days.

Express News Service

GUWAHATI: Assam has “pushed back” 33 illegal Bangladeshi infiltrators as part of its ongoing drive against illegal immigration.

In a post on X, Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma confirmed that 33 new infiltrators had been pushed back to their country of origin. However, he did not specify the date of the pushback.

He further warned that the state government’s efforts to tackle infiltration would be further intensified in the coming days.

Later in the day, the Chief Minister addressed the media, explaining that the pushback was taking place on two fronts: one targeting individuals who arrived after 1971 and were living in the state illegally, and the other focusing on new infiltrators.

“Under the Immigrants Expulsion Act, we are empowered to push back any foreigner who came post-1971. We will keep increasing our efforts to push back people,” he said.

The Assam Accord, signed between the central government and the All Assam Students’ Union in 1985 at the conclusion of the six-year-long Assam Agitation, mandates that immigrants who arrived after March 24, 1971, should be detected and deported.

Over the past few months, the Assam government has pushed back several hundred Bangladeshi illegal immigrants and infiltrators.

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