'Nagaland BJP won't sever ties with national leadership even if citizenship bill is back'

  • | Monday | 25th February, 2019

Opposition MLAs are not nursery students, we understand Citizenship (Amendment) Bill and Article 371(A). "Initially, the chief minister had stated they will not oppose the bill because Article 371(A) protects Nagas. "The statements of the PDA members are very misleading. It is not a rocket science. "Along said the state unit of BJP "strongly supports the resolution".The bill, which was introduced in Parliament by the NDA government, is a matter of concern for the indigenous people of Northeast states, including Nagaland, the higher and technical education minister said.He called upon the MLAs to "unite together on the issue, instead of speaking against each other".Minister for Agriculture and Cooperation G Kaito Aye said the Northeast states should be exempted from the purview of the bill.

KOHIMA: Nagaland minister Temjen Imna Along said Sunday the state unit members of BJP would not dissociate themselves from the national leadership even if the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill is brought into force by the saffron party-led NDA government after Lok Sabha elections.Along, who is also the state unit president of BJP, was replying to a question by Opposition Naga People's Front (NPF) MLA Moatoshi Longkumer in the assembly.Longkumer, however, insisted that the BJP, a constituent of the ruling NDPP-led People's Democratic Alliance government, also issue a statement on the matter.He alleged that the Neiphu Rio-led government took a U-turn on the bill after protests broke out in the state and other parts of the northeast."Initially, the chief minister had stated they will not oppose the bill because Article 371(A) protects Nagas. They changed their stance later, keeping in mind popular sentiments," the NPF legislator said during a discussion on the bill.The chief minister tabled a resolution in the assembly Saturday, opposing the passage of the Citizenship Bill in Parliament.Rio said the central government was pursuing the bill for enactment, despite opposition by state governments, political parties, tribal organizations and civil societies in the Northeast.The bill, passed in Lok Sabha on January 8, seeks to provide citizenship to non-Muslims from Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanistan after six years of residence in India.Longkumer said every constituent of the PDA government - the Nationalist Democratic Progressive Party , the Bharatiya Janata Party, the Janata Dal (U) and the National People's Party and an Independent MLA - should make their stand clear on the bill, he said."The statements of the PDA members are very misleading. Opposition MLAs are not nursery students, we understand Citizenship (Amendment) Bill and Article 371(A). It is not a rocket science."Along said the state unit of BJP "strongly supports the resolution".The bill, which was introduced in Parliament by the NDA government, is a matter of concern for the indigenous people of Northeast states, including Nagaland, the higher and technical education minister said.He called upon the MLAs to "unite together on the issue, instead of speaking against each other".Minister for Agriculture and Cooperation G Kaito Aye said the Northeast states should be exempted from the purview of the bill.

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