Muslims in Assam can be rendered stateless

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Al Jazeeera News :
India is set to publish the first draft of a list of citizens of the northeastern state of Assam after decades of debate, sometimes violent, over immigration from neighbouring Bangladesh.
The draft list, to be published at midnight on Sunday, will ultimately be incorporated into the National Register of Citizens (NRC) after a census carried out for the first time since 1951.
The government claims this register will be used to identify and deport illegal immigrants, but activists warn that hundreds of thousands of Muslims in Assam could be rendered stateless in the process.
“The officials [associated with the NRC project] visited many homes in our village but skipped ours. I am scared about my family being kept off the list. I am an Indian citizen. My father teaches in a school here; my grandfather has a national voter identity card too, [but I] am still petrified,” 25-year-old Hussein Ahmed Madani, who lives was the spark for establishing a secret investigation into possible connections between Russia and the Trump campaign in July 2016.
The newspaper’s story cites four anonymous American and Australian foreign officials “with direct knowledge of the Australian’s role” as its source. The BBC has not independently verified the claims.
Mr Papadopoulos has already pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI about meetings arranged while he was working with the Trump campaign.
The FBI’s original investigation has since been handed off to special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe, with which Mr Papadopoulos is now cooperating.
The White House has attempted to portray him as a “low-level volunteer” with little influence within the campaign. However, Mr Papadopoulos is known to have attended several meetings with Mr Trump and other senior officials such as Attorney General Jeff Sessions, as well as meeting a British foreign office official and arranging high-level meetings. Mr Papadopoulos was told by a contact with Russian links that Moscow had “dirt” on Mr Trump’s Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton in the form of “thousands of emails” in April 2016 – something revealed earlier this year. But the New York Times now reports that weeks later, in May, Mr Papadopoulos was speaking to Alexander Downer, Australia’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, at an “upscale London bar” when he revealed the existence of the Russian information.
It is not clear why Mr Papadopoulos chose to share his knowledge with Mr Downer, but the Times reports that the Australian diplomat passed the information to his government.
Two months later, when copies of Mrs Clinton’s emails began appearing online, the Australian government passed the information to the FBI.
Once that happened, the newspaper said, “the bureau opened an investigation that became one of its most closely guarded secrets”. “Senior agents did not discuss it at the daily morning briefing, a classified setting where officials normally speak freely about highly sensitive operations.”
The newspaper reports that corroborating intelligence from other friendly governments, including the British and the Dutch, helped drive the investigation. White House lawyer Ty Cobb declined to comment on the New York Times report.
“I have seen many people in my village returning after long fights in the High Court and Supreme Court, vindicated after long battles to prove their citizenship. But there is an atmosphere of fear in the village, in our community here. Who knows who will be thrown out as Bangladeshi.”

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