The Citizenship (Amendment) Act, 2019, was passed this winter and met with protests—beginning in Assam, where the issue is not about exclusion of Muslims (like in the rest of the country), but an outright rejection of citizenship to all immigrants, irrespective of religion, from Bangladesh. Sabyasachi Mahanta is one among millions opposing the law. “The CAA, like several instruments before, countermands provisions in the Assam Accord. First, when Indian citizenship was determined by the 1951 census, Assam agreed to take the additional burden of 20 years (till 1971) to accommodate Bangladeshi immigrants. The CAA now pushed the cut-off to 2014. Why pile extra load on us, especially on the Brahmaputra Valley? Barak is already Bengali-majority and the tribal autonomous areas, protected by the Constitution’s Sixth Schedule, are exempted from CAA,” he says. Columnist Dwipen Kakoty echoes the weight of history, saying the Assamese fear of becoming a minority in their own state (only 48 per cent of the population speak Assamese as the first language) could take shape if more Bengali-speaking Bangladeshi immigrants are allowed to settle in Assam as Indian citizens. Bangladesh has 11.37 million Hindus (2001 census) and the CAA made it easy for them to apply for Indian citizenship.