Saturday, November 30, 2013

Where does Assam lead demographically?                                                               
                    Hira Charan Narjinari

The greatest and the most spectacular single event that took place in the history of Assam during the first half of the twentieth century was the immigration of enormous number of peasants from Bengal. Out of these immigrants an overwhelming majority of more than 90% of the land-hungry immigrants consisted of Muslims alone. And the second half of that century was wrought with infiltration of illegal East Pakistanis/Bangladeshis into Assam.  Assam and Bengal were two separate provinces with distinct languages, cultures and religions. Naturally, inflow of Bengali-speaking Muslims into Assam meant invasion by people of different ethnic community. Therefore, while writing the 1931 Census Report C.S. Mullan had employed military term like ‘army corps’ to describe the Bengali Muslim immigration into Assam.  How the Bengali people of Bengal/Eastern Bengal province invaded Assam and settled there permanently against the wishes of the indigenous Assamese people has been brilliantly described by early Superintendents of Censuses.

Although the British annexed Assam in 1826, en masse movement of Bengalis from Bengal/East Bengal to Assam took almost a century from that time. It was only during 1901-1911 that a great change in the demography of Assam was noticed when the men of Mymensingh began to advance to Assam, “driven apparently by pressure on the soil at home.” They were joined by people of other Eastern Bengal districts, in less numbers. There had been extraordinary increases of migrants to the Char lands of Goalpara from the Bengal Districts of Mymensingh, Pabna, Bogra and Rangpur, and only few cultivators from Eastern Bengal went beyond Goalpara, and the colonists formed an appreciable element of population in all the four lower and central districts. Persons censused in the other districts of the Brahmaputra Valley were mostly clerks, traders and professional men who numbered only a few thousands.

During the whole of twentieth century the activities of Eastern Bengal peasants concentrated chiefly in the Brahmaputra valley which consisted of the districts of Goalpara, Kamrup, Nowgong, Darrang, Sibsagar and Lakhimpur. The opening of the Assam-Bengal Railway and the extension of the Eastern Bengal State Railway to Guwahati had not only greatly improved communications but had facilitated an influx of settlers to the Brahmaputra Valley from North and East Bengal. Almost every train and steamer used to bring parties of Bengali Muslim settlers and it was believed that their march would extend further up the valley and away from the river before long. It was also believed that once the good news spread in the more distant districts like Dacca and Rajshahi divisions, colonists from those divisions would begin to come to Assam.[1] Hutton remarks that “Since then these settlers have not refrained from breeding and their progeny born in Assam was not distinguishable in the Census returns, except in so far as it was predominantly Muslim which the indigenous population was not.”[2]  R.B. Vaghaiwalla as Deputy Commissioner of Goalpara during the 1940s personally saw hundreds of Muslim immigrant persons coming by trains to Goalpara. He had the same experience as Deputy Commissioner of Cachar during 1948-49 when he saw hundreds of Muslim immigrants regularly travelling by the Hill Section Railway from Badarpur to Lumding in order to go to the Brahmaputra Valley for settlement.[3]

As Goalpara was the nearest district to the Bengal frontier, settlers from East Bengal were initially most active in that district. In 1881-1891 the population of Goalpara increased by 1.4% and in 1891-1901 by 2% only but in 1901-1911 the increase shot up by 30%. E.A. Gait commented in the 1911 Census of India that the large increase of 30% was due mainly to “the extensive immigration of Muhammadans along the course of the Brahmaputra from Mymensingh, Rangpur and Pabna.”  In 1941 the total Muslim population of the district was 468924 forming 46.23% of the total population of Goalpara.

Kamrup felt the impact of immigration only in 1931 when the decadal variation rate rose suddenly from 14.20% to 27.93%. Throughout the 1921-1931 the Bengal Muslim settlers continued to immigrate into Barpeta. They filled up all the chars and riverain tracts and gradually occupied all available waste lands. There was an unprecedented increase of 69% in the population of Barpeta in 1931 which is stated to have been solely due to Eastern Bengal immigrants, chiefly from Mymensingh.[4] In the 1941 Census the population of Kamrup was 1264200 which was an increase of 287454 over 1931 population of 976746. In 1951 the population of Kamrup increased by 226192. The density of population in Kamrup had doubled in the 30 years from 198 per square mile in 1921 to 387 per square mile in 1951. In 1951-1961 the population increase of Kamrup was 38.39%.

In the Darrang district the impact of immigration was felt first in 1921, when decennial variation suddenly shot up from 11.89% to 26.67%. The increases in 1931, 1941, 1951, 1961 and 1971 were 22.68%, 26.07%, 24.25%, 39.64% and 34.62% respectively. In 1941 the total Muslim population in the district was 120995.

In Nowgong during 1911-1921 the percentage increase was being 31.9 per cent. But during 1921-1931 there was a largest percentage increase of 41.3 percent in Nowgong. During the decade immigration continued unabated and there were 56,000 more persons in Nowgong district who were born in Mymensingh. The greatest increase of population had been in mauzas Bokoni (295 per cent.), Lahorghat (163 per cent.), Laokhowa (140.5 per cent.), Dhing (126 per cent.), Namati (108 per cent.) and Juria (101 per cent.). It has been stated in the Report that those enormous increases were due almost entirely to the influx of new settlers – mainly from Mymensingh. In 1941 the total population of Muslim in the district was 250113.

Sibsagar showed in 1901 an increase of 117,310 persons or 24.4% which was  due in equal proportion to immigration and natural increase. Since 1872 Sibsagar added 280,000 to its population or 88%.[5] Of the three subdivisions of Golaghat, Sibsagar and Jorhat in 1931 the highest rate of increase had been recorded by Golaghat with 18.4 per cent. Sibsagar subdivision showed an increase of 14.4%, as against 20.5% in 1911-1921, and Jorhat, the Sadar subdivision only 8.5% as against 18.2% in 1911-1921. In 1941 the total Muslim population was 51769.

The population of Lakhimpur district was 117343 persons or 46.1% in 1901 – 16% from natural growth and 30% from immigration. The growth of Lakhimpur district had been continuous and the population had trebled since 1872.[6]  The total population of the district in 1941 was 954960 which had increased to 1126294 or 17.94% in 1951. In 1941 the total population of Muslim was 44579.

G.T. Lloyd in 1921 estimated that including children born after their arrival in Assam the total number of settlers was at least 300,000 in that year. Mullan placed their number in 1931 to be over half a million. The number of new immigrants from Mymensingh alone had been 140,000 and the old settlers were undoubtedly increasing and multiplying. It was pointed out in the Census Report for 1921 that the colonists had settled by families and not singly. This has been confirmed by the fact that out of the 338,000 persons born in Mymensingh and censused in Assam over 152,000 were women.

During the decade 1921-1931 the principal districts that were affected by Muslim invasion were Nagaon, Kamrup and Darrang where Muslims increased by 152%, 115% and 85% respectively.[7]  It was noticed in 1931 that Sibsagar and Lakhimpur were still untouched. Mullan reports: “Sibsagar and Lakhimpur are now the only districts in the Assam Valley which have remained practically untouched by the invading army of Muslim immigrants. One-fifth of the entire population of the Assam Valley is now Muslim.”[8]

By 1931, the whole complexion of the population of Assam was being altered by the permanent immigrants from Mymensingh in Bengal. This had for years been an obvious and disturbing change to all native residents in the Assam Valley.[9] It will be best to quote C.S. Mullan, the Census Superintendent for Assam himself.  

“Probably the most important event in the province during the last twenty five years – an event, moreover, which seems likely to alter permanently the whole future of Assam and to destroy more surely than did the Burmese invaders of 1820 the whole structure of Assamese culture and civilization – has been the invasion of a vast horde of land-hungry Bengali immigrants, mostly Muslims, from the districts of Eastern Bengal and in particular from Mymensingh. This invasion began sometime before 1911, and the census report of that year is the first report which makes mention of the advancing host. But, as we now know, the Bengali immigrants censused for the first time on their char lands of Goalpara in 1911 were merely the advance guard – or rather the scouts – of a huge army following closely all their heels. By 1921 the first army corps had passed into Assam and had practically conquered the district of Goalpara”[10] 

As to the change at the 1931 Census, C.S. Mullan, the Census Superintendent may again be quoted:-

“I have already remarked that by 1921 the first army corps of the invaders had conquered Goalpara. The second army corps which followed them in the years 1921-1931 has consolidated their position in that district and has also completed conquest of Nowgong. The Barpeta subdivision of Kamrup has also fallen to their attack and Darrang is being invaded. Sibsagar has so far escaped completely but the few thousand Mymensinghias in North Lakhimpur are an outpost which may, during the next decade, prove to be a valuable basis of major operations. Wheresoever the caracase, there will the vultures be gathered together – Where there is waste land thither flock the Mymensinghias. In fact the way in which they have seized upon the vacant areas in the Assam Valley seems almost uncanny. Without fuss, without tumult, without undue trouble to the district revenue staffs, a population which must amount to over half a million has transplanted itself from Bengal to the Assam Valley during the last twenty-five years. It looks like a marvel of administrative organization on the part of Government but it is nothing of the sort; the only thing I can compare it to is the mass movement of a large body of ants. It is sad but by no means improbable that in another thirty years Sibsagar district will be the only part of Assam in which an Assamese will find himself at home.”[11]

The trend continued even after the partition of India in 1947. Partition however did not “assuage the land hunger in East Pakistan.”  The border failed to create territories that acted as self-enclosed containers of human resources because it was imposed on a region with an expansionary population. People crisscrossed the border in their thousands, and most of these population movements were not authorized by the new states.[12] A booklet was produced by the Directorate of Advertising and Visual Publicity, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting for the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India in August 1963 on the subject of ‘Influx.’ In this booklet continued influx of large number of Muslims from Pakistan (East Pakistan, now Bangladesh) even after partition, has been acknowledged by the Central Government. The following extract confirms this:

“The new international boundary was not physically marked on the ground, was largely unguarded and virtually unpatrolled. Interplay of economic forces continued despite Partition. Large numbers of Muslims from East Pakistan continued to move across the open frontier into Assam, Tripura and West Bengal – for land, work, and opportunity. Their passage was illegal but economic forces proved more potent than passport and visa regulations.”[13]

In 1951, persons born in Pakistan and enumerated in Assam reached the enormous total of 833 thousand persons, out of whom excepting a bare 37 thousand enumerated in the Assam Hills Division, the vast majority of 796 thousand was enumerated in the Brahmaputra Valley alone. These huge numbers included the large number of refugees born in Pakistan who had migrated to Assam during the partition. The number of refugees in Assam in 1951 was 274 thousand, out of whom, all excepting 14 thousand were in the Assam Plains. [14]  These figures are a striking testimony to the vast number of East Bengal settlers in Assam. Even the setting up of two Dominions of India and Pakistan did not deter these settlers from continuing to pour into Assam.

The East Bengal immigrants were not natives of Assam yet enormous amount of land had to be settled with them throughout the Brahmaputra Valley. Till 1930 no exact amount of land settled with East Bengal immigrants is available. But from 1930 to 1950 we possess Reports of the Land Revenue Administration which reveal startling truth about land settled with East Bengal immigrants other than ex-tea garden labourers. During the years 1930-40 land settled with East Bengal immigrants in the Brahmaputra Valley alone was 5967 thousand acres, 58 thousand acres in Sadiya and Balipara and 137 thousand acres in Cachar. During the decade 1940-50 land settled with East Bengal immigrants was even larger in area viz. 8926 thousand acres, out of which 8702 thousand acres were settled in the Brahmaputra Valley alone and 165 thousand acres in Cachar and 59 thousand acres in Sadiya and Balipara. Thus during 20 years from 1930 to 1950, apart from Sadiya and Balipara and Cachar, 14669 thousand acres of land in the Brahmaputra Valley alone were settled with East Bengal immigrants. Can you believe the immensity of the figure? It is almost unbelievable. How many states/provinces in India during those decades siphoned off such huge amount of their lands and settled with immigrants? 

It may be noted that at a time when Muslims in Assam even did not constitute majority in no districts, they produced crimes of violence, disregarded government officials, openly announced that they were the kings and the law was not made for them.[15] Rai Bahadur P.G. Mukherji, the then Commissioner of Nowgong reports in 1931 thus:  “Their hunger for land was so great that, in their eagerness to grasp as much as they could cultivate they not infrequently encroached on Government reserves and on lands belonging to the local people from which they could be evicted only with great difficulty. In the beginning they had their own way and there was frequent friction with the indigenous population who did not like their dealings as neighbours.”[16]

But now they are stronger in number and it will be natural that they would become more aggressive in their activities. Some intellectuals have criticized C.S. Mullan’s prophecy that “in another thirty years Sibsagar district will be the only part of Assam in which an Assamese will find himself at home” is rather exaggerated and the prophecy is not likely to be fulfilled.[17] Just consider the total Muslim population of Sibsagar in 1872. They were in that year only 12619 persons but in 2001 they had increased to 85761. Mullan’s “thirty years” might be taken figuratively, but what he meant by saying this, I presume, is that a day will come when Assam will become a Muslim majority State. The 2001 Census Report on the total Muslim population in Assam is pointing towards the fulfillment of the prophecy though in a slow pace but the trend tells us that the destiny of Assam as a secular State is under great threat.

According to Mr. Pakyntein, the Superintendent of Census operation, Assam, 1961, at least 5,20,000 people migrated into Assam during 1951-61. The number of Muslim immigrants into Assam from East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) during this period had been worked out to be about 220,000. So the remaining 300,000 must be Hindu displaced persons and other non-Muslim persons who came to Assam from other parts of India.[18]

In 1965, Intelligence Bureau, Ministry of Home Affairs, drafted a scheme for the prevention of Infiltration from Pakistan into Assam states under sub-title “The Problem of Illegal Immigration” in which it has been remarked thus:

“The number of illegal immigrants into Assam from Pakistan over the course of the last 12 years has been very conservatively estimated at about 250 thousand. Local unofficial estimates, however, put this figure even higher. The fact that such a large number of immigrants succeeded in illegally crossing the frontier and settling down unnoticed would prove that the measures so far taken have not been effective. Indeed very large pockets in Nowgong, Darrang, Goalpara, North Lakhimpur districts are inhabited almost entirely by Muslims, a very large proportion of whom are new immigrants.”[19] 

Nilim Dutta, Executive Director of the Strategic Research and Analysis Organisation, Guwahati, states that “the high population growth rate in Assam has declined since 1971 and has remained lower than that of India, categorically refuting assumptions of continuing illegal immigration from Bangladesh”.[20] How would Sri Dutta explain out the exclusion of about 9-10 million population of Bangladesh in 1991 from the computation? Sarifa Begum, a Bangladeshi demographer has rightly attributed the ‘missing millions’ to unregistered ‘out-migration’.[21] A study by Irvine Kamal Sadiq also reveals that the highest percentage growth rate of population of Assam occurred during 1971-1991 which registered a growth of 53.56 percent.[22] This shows that Sri Dutta’s claim that high population growth rate in Assam has declined since 1971 is not tenable.

That the Muslim population has been going on increasing decade after decade is conclusively confirmed by the Censuses since 1872. The 2001 Census reveals startling truth about this. In 2001 out of 23 districts in Assam at least 14 districts are found Muslim majority districts. Out of 14 districts 6 districts viz. Dhubri (74.29%) Barpeta (59.37%), Hailakandi (57.63%), Goalpara (53.71%),Karimganj(52.30%) and Nagaon(50.99%) Muslims form absolute majority; 4 districts viz. Marigaon (47.59%), Bongaigaon (38.52%), Cachar (36.13%), and Darrang (35.54%) are closely following and 5 districts viz. Kamrup (24.79%) Nalbari (22.10%), Kokrajhar (20.36%) Lakhimpur (16.14%)and Sonitpur (15.94%), are slowly but steadily advancing.

The first formal Census of 1872 shows that immigrant Bengali Muslims in the Brahmaputra Valley numbered only 176108 or 4.24% but now they are the malik of a few districts in the Valley.  Will critics give rational explanations as to how from an insignificant number of population in Assam, Muslim population has grown so spectacularly? Shall we disagree with the Census figures of the Muslim population in Assam enumerated in 2001?  What does the 2001Census indicate about the Muslim population compared to the 1872 Census? In 1872 the total Muslim population in Assam, excluding Sylhet and including Cachar, was 250469 persons only and in 1941 they increased to 3442479 persons but in 2001 they had shot to 8240661 persons. How did it happen? Is this solely due to natural growth?  Is migration/illegal immigration a myth or a reality?

The latest 2011 Census of India shows that the population of Assam has increased by 4513744 or 16.93% and the total population now stands at 31169272. Kamrup (Metro) has registered the highest density of population of 2010 persons per square kilometer followed by Dhubri (1171 persons per sq.km.). Once the religion-wise population of Assam as per the 2011 Census is published then it will be ascertained as to whether there was in-migration or not. In 2005 D.N. Bezboruah, Editor, The Sentinel, lamented saying, “The biggest problem facing Assam and the north-eastern States of India today is large-scale illegal migration from Bangladesh. The problem is very serious today because at the present rate of influx, there is the very real danger of Assam being annexed to Bangladesh in just a couple of decades from now, and the irony of the situation is that the problem has stemmed from greed on both sides – greed for cultivable land on one side and greed for votes on the other. And now there is the remarkable poetic justice of the greed for power having infected the providers of easy illegal votes as well.”[23]  

The question of illegal Bangladeshi infiltration into Assam is still a matter to be sorted out once for all. How and when this issue will be finally settled rests with the seriousness, interest and intention of the State and Central governments.  




[1] G.T. Lloyd, Census of India, 1921, Vol. III, Assam, Part-I, Report, p. 42.
[2] Census of India, 1931, Vol. I, India, Part I – Report, p. 65.
[3] R.B. Vagjaiwall, Census of India, 1951, Volume XII Assam, Manipur and Tripura, Part 1-A Report, p.75.
[4] C.S. Mullan, Census of India, 1931, Assam, Volume III p.14
[5] H.H. Risley & E.A. Gait, Census of India, Volume I India Part I Report, p.46.
[6] H.H. Risley & E.A Gait, Census of India, 1901, Volume I India Part I Report, p. 46.
[7] C.S. Mullan, Census of India, 1931, Assam Vol.III Part I Report, p.193.
[8] C.S. Mullan, Ibid.
[9] J.H. Hutton, Census of India, 1931, Volume I, India, Part I, Report, p.65
[10] C.S. Mullan, Census of India, 1931, Vol. III, Part I Report, pp. 49-50.
[11] C.S. Mullan, Census of India, 1931, Volume III Assam Part I Report  p.52
[12] Willem Van Schendel, The Bengal Borderland Beyond State and Nation in South Asia, 2005, p.210.
[13] DAVP, Ministry if I&B, for Min. of External Affairs, GOI, August 1963, quoted by Sekhar Gupta in Assam: A Valley Divided, Appendix 3 p.191.
[14] R.B. Vaghaiwalla, Census of India 1951 Vol. XII, Assam, Manipur and Tripura, Part I-A Report, p. 74
[15] Harendra Nath Barua, Reflections on Assam Cum Pakistan, 1944, pp.65-66.
[16] C.S. Mullan, Census of India, 1931, Volume III, Assam, Part I, Report, p.52.
[17] H.K. Barpujari, North-East India Problems, Policies & Prospects, 1998, p.37.
[18] Census of India, 1961, Vol-III, Assam, Part I-A, General Report, p.72.
[19] Annexure 4 in Shekhar Gupta’s Assam a Valley Divided, 1984, p.201-202. 
[20] Nilim Dutta, The Myth of the Bangladeshi and Violence in Assam, available at http://kafila.org/2012/08/16/the-myth-of-the-bangladeshi-and-violence-in-assam-nilim-dutta/
[21] Bibhuti Bhusan Nandy, Space Invaders, The Hindustan Times, New Delhi, February 14, 2003.
[22] Irvine Kamal Sadiq, Paper Citizens: How Illegal Immigrants Acquire Citizenship in Developing Countries, 2009, p.42.
[23] The Sentinel, January 02, 2005.

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