Dokument #1312660
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
Muslim immigrants have drifted into the
province of Assam since partition (1947) in search of arable land,
and a number of them were deported to Eastern Pakistan (Bangladesh)
during the early 1960s [ Nyrop R.F. et al. Area Handbook for
India, (Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975),
p.159.]. By 1971, 24 percent of the population of Assam was Muslim
[ Ibid.]. Since 1979, the renewed influx of Muslim migrants from
the delta of Bengale has led to a violent rejection of the
newcomers by the local Assamese community [Michel Clévenot,
L'état des religions dans le monde, (Paris et
Montréal: La Découverte/Le Cerf/Boréal, 1987),
p.255.]. According to one estimate, about 4,000 people have died in
Assam in religious violence [ Jack Donnelly and R.E. Howard, eds.
International Handbook of Human Rights, (New York: Greenwood
Press, 1987), p.145.]. A table showing the number of communal
incidents in Assam from 1968 to 1989 is attached [ Mushirul Hasan,
"Indian Muslims Since Independence: In Search of Integration and
Identity", Third World Quarterly, April 1988, vol.10, no.2,
p.820.].
An agreement aimed at resolving religious
strife stemming from the influx of Muslim migrants was signed in
August 1985 between Hindu activists (who later formed the Asom Gana
Parishad now in power) and the Indian government [ "By-elections
and Cabinet Reshuffle in Assam - AASU Agitation - Assassination of
UMF President - Alleged Formation of New Extremist Political Party
- Demands for Autonomous Hill District State", Keesing's Record
of World Events, vol.32, October 1986, p.34680.]. The agreement
was to deny voting rights for ten years to Muslim immigrants who
arrived between 1961 and 1971, and to deport those who immigrated
later [ Bard-Anders Andreassen and Asbjorn Eide, eds. Human
Rights in Developing Countries 1987/88, (Oslo: Akademisk
Forlag, 1988), p. 214.]. The Northeast of India is reportedly in a
permanent state of emergency and tensions run high in Assam where
extremist groups are flourishing [ Ibid.]. During the January 1988
elections in Assam, violence rose over the delays in implementing
the Assam accord of August 1985 ["Nagaland State Elections -
Assam-Nagaland Border Tension - Congress Defeat in Assam
By-election - Tribal Agitation for Separate State in Assam",
Keesing's Record of World Events, vol.34, March 1988,
p.35775.]. During 1988, extremist activities were numerous in
Assam, and Hindu-Muslim clashes occurred throughout Northern India
[ Alan J. Day and Verena Hoffman, The Annual Register: A Record
of World Events 1988, (London: Longman, 1989), p.309.]. In July
1988, Assam's Chief Minister offered his resignation to protest
against continuous violence in the state ["Assam", Keesing's
Record of World Events, vol.35, no.5, May 1989, p.36694.]. In
August 1989, four days of violence involving Bodo tribesmen in
Assam led to the death of over 150 persons ["Violence in Punjab,
Kashmir and Assam", Keesing's Record of World Events, August
1989, vol.35, no.7-8, p.36851.]. The Hindu newspaper from
Madras later implied that reports of violence were circulated by
the government of Arunachal Pradesh in order to de-stabilize the
Asom Gana Parishad government [Ibid.].
No information on the Ohamian language is
currently available to the IRBDC in Ottawa. A comprehensive
encyclopedia on the languages of the world does not list that
language [Kenneth Katzner, The Languages of the World, (New
York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1975).]. A language with a similar name
(Ahom), however, is reportedly used in parts of Assam for religious
purposes [ The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, (Macropaedia),
vol.22, (Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1989), p.593.]. Many
other groups have in fact adopted Assamese as their first language
[ The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, (Macropaedia), vol.21,
(Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1989), p.124.]. The Ahoms are a
tribe that ruled Assam (and gave it its name, A and O being
interchangeable in most languages of Eastern India, and S being
replaceable with H) [ Ibid, p.125.]. The Ahoms reportedly no longer
use their own language and now speak Assamese except for religious
purposes [ The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, (Micropaedia),
vol.1, (Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica), p.168.].