What Happened
- The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) constituted an Empowered Committee on February 20, 2026, to oversee scrutiny and approval of citizenship applications under the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) in West Bengal.
- The committee is headed by the Deputy Registrar General, Directorate of Census Operations, West Bengal, and includes representatives from the Intelligence Bureau, Foreigners Regional Registration Officer (FRRO), State Informatics Officer, and the Post Master General of West Bengal.
- The committee serves as the final authority for processing citizenship applications filed by persecuted minorities from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan under Section 6B of the Citizenship Act.
- West Bengal shares a long international border with Bangladesh, making it a significant state for CAA applications given historical migration patterns.
- The move comes ahead of the West Bengal Assembly elections, adding a political dimension to the administrative decision.
Static Topic Bridges
Citizenship Amendment Act, 2019
The Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019 (CAA) amends the Citizenship Act, 1955, to provide a pathway to Indian citizenship for persecuted religious minorities -- specifically Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis, and Christians -- from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan who entered India on or before a specified cut-off date.
- Originally passed by Parliament in December 2019, the CAA rules were not notified until March 11, 2024, after a four-year delay.
- The original cut-off date was December 31, 2014; this was extended to December 31, 2024 through a notification on September 3, 2025.
- The first citizenship certificates under CAA were granted on May 15, 2024, with 14 migrants receiving certificates in Delhi and over 350 receiving nationality digitally across the country.
- An online portal (indiancitizenshiponline.nic.in) was created for eligible refugees to apply, requiring proof of country of origin, religion, date of entry, and knowledge of an Indian language.
- Over 200 petitions challenging the law and its rules are pending before the Supreme Court, though the Court refused to stay the rules in March 2024.
Connection to this news: The formation of the Empowered Committee in West Bengal signals the Centre's intent to accelerate CAA implementation in a state that has politically resisted it. The multi-agency composition (intelligence, census, postal, and foreign registration) reflects the complexity of verifying cross-border migration claims.
Federal Structure and Centre-State Relations
India's federal structure involves a distribution of legislative and executive powers between the Centre and the states under the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution. Citizenship falls under the Union List (Entry 17), giving the Central Government exclusive legislative authority, but implementation often requires cooperation from state governments.
- Under Article 11, Parliament has exclusive power to make laws relating to citizenship.
- Several states, including West Bengal, Kerala, and Rajasthan, passed resolutions opposing the CAA, though such resolutions are not legally binding on the Centre.
- The West Bengal government has publicly opposed CAA implementation and has not cooperated with Central agencies on this matter.
- The Constitution does not grant states the power to refuse implementation of validly enacted Central laws on Union List subjects.
- The formation of an Empowered Committee with Central officials (Census, IB, FRRO) effectively bypasses the need for state government cooperation in the application scrutiny process.
Connection to this news: The Empowered Committee structure, composed entirely of Central government officials and agencies, is designed to enable CAA implementation in West Bengal regardless of the state government's political opposition, illustrating the Centre's constitutional prerogative over citizenship matters under the Union List.
India-Bangladesh Border and Migration
The India-Bangladesh border stretches approximately 4,096 km across five Indian states (West Bengal, Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram), with West Bengal accounting for the longest segment at approximately 2,216 km. Historical migration from East Pakistan/Bangladesh to India has been a persistent issue since Partition (1947) and the Bangladesh Liberation War (1971).
- The National Register of Citizens (NRC) exercise in Assam (completed in 2019) identified approximately 19 lakh people as potential non-citizens, though the process remains legally contested.
- West Bengal houses a significant population of Hindu migrants from Bangladesh who settled over decades, particularly after the 1971 war and subsequent communal violence.
- The Border Security Force (BSF) patrols the India-Bangladesh border, with fencing covering approximately 3,100 km of the 4,096 km boundary.
- The Foreigners Tribunals system operates in Assam but is not established in West Bengal for large-scale citizenship determination.
Connection to this news: West Bengal's significance for CAA implementation stems from its long Bangladesh border and large population of migrants who may qualify under the Act. The Empowered Committee provides an institutional mechanism to process applications in a state where no Foreigners Tribunals exist and the state government has declined to facilitate the process.
Key Facts & Data
- CAA passed: December 2019; Rules notified: March 11, 2024
- Cut-off date extended: from December 31, 2014 to December 31, 2024 (September 2025 notification)
- Eligible communities: Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi, Christian from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Pakistan
- Committee head: Deputy Registrar General, Directorate of Census Operations, West Bengal
- Committee members: IB officer, FRRO nominee, State Informatics Officer, Post Master General
- India-Bangladesh border: 4,096 km total; West Bengal segment: ~2,216 km
- First CAA citizenship certificates: May 15, 2024 (14 in Delhi, 350+ digitally across India)
- Over 200 petitions challenging CAA pending before Supreme Court