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Enclave dwellers celebrate ‘second freedom’

At the stroke of Friday mid-night, 51,000 stateless people of India and Bangladesh attained freedom when the two countries ended more than six decades of their lingering wait for citizenship by exchanging 162 adversely held enclaves between them.

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Cooch Behar (WB), August 1

At the stroke of Friday mid-night, 51,000 stateless people of India and Bangladesh attained freedom when the two countries ended more than six decades of their lingering wait for citizenship by exchanging 162 adversely held enclaves between them.

Seconds past mid-night, hundreds of people in the Indian-held enclaves, including Madhya Masaldanga came out of their homes, hoisted the Tricolour and danced in joy as the much-awaited exchange of enclaves—111 of India and 51 of Bangladesh—came into effect.

The exchange of enclaves was made possible under the Land Boundary Agreement signed between the two countries recently.

Though no official ceremony was held, an organisation named Bharat-Bangladesh Enclave Exchange Co-ordination Committee (BBEECC) organised a ceremony at Madhya Masaldanga enclave adjacent to Dinhata sub-division of Cooch Behar. It was an enclave of Bangladesh encircled by Indian territory. For the first time, the residents of enclaves will get identity papers and land in their own names putting to an end the agony of the residents that started in 1947 with the Partition.

“For us this is nothing but second freedom. India might have got freedom in 1947. But we got our freedom today as from now on we will be citizen of a country. We will also be called Indians,” said a 18-year-old enclave dweller, while waving the Tricolour. The land accord was originally agreed in 1974 by the then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and her Bangladeshi counterpart Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. — PTI

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