Soheni Adhikary, a Kolkata resident whose husband was among the 26 victims of the brutal 22 April terror attack in Pahalgam, Jammu and Kashmir, has been granted Indian citizenship under the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), according to Sukanta Majumdar, Union Minister of State and West Bengal BJP president.
A new chapter amid tragedy
Soheni, originally born in Fatulla, Narayanganj, Bangladesh in 1989, entered India in 1997 and married Bitan Adhikari, an IT professional based in Florida, USA. Following Bitan’s tragic death in the Pahalgam attack, questions about Soheni’s nationality surfaced among some of Bitan’s family members.
On Friday, the Union Ministry of Home Affairs issued her a Certificate of Registration under the Citizenship Act, 1955, formally recognising her as an Indian citizen.
Majumdar shared the certificate on social media, praising the government’s decision. “Soheni applied for citizenship long ago after her marriage to Bitan. The Indian government has given her a fresh start by granting her citizenship. I extend my gratitude to Union Home Minister Amit Shah and Prime Minister Narendra Modi,” he told reporters on Saturday, shortly before a ceasefire was announced in the Indo-Pak conflict.
The Pahalgam tragedy
Bitan Adhikari, who was vacationing in Kashmir with his wife and young son, was among three West Bengal residents killed in the 22 April terror attack in Pahalgam.
The other victims were Sameer Guha from Behala, Kolkata, and Manish Ranjan from Jhalda, Purulia. Survivors, including Soheni, recounted that the attackers targeted Hindus, identifying them by the sindoor (vermilion) on their foreheads. The Indian Armed Forces launched Operation Sindoor in response to the attack.
The West Bengal government has provided compensation to the victims’ families, with funds distributed among Bitan’s elderly parents, who reside in Patuli, Kolkata, and Soheni. Politicians from both the ruling Trinamool Congress (TMC) and opposition parties have visited the Adhikari family, pledging support in the wake of the tragedy.
CAA and political controversy
The CAA, passed in 2019, fast-tracks citizenship for non-Muslims from Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Bangladesh who entered India before 2015 to escape religious persecution.
The law has sparked debate, with West Bengal’s ruling TMC, led by Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, labelling it unconstitutional for linking citizenship to religion. Banerjee has warned that the CAA could be a precursor to the National Register of Citizens (NRC), citing its enforcement in Assam in 2019, which she claims led to the detention of 1.9 million people, including 1.3 million Hindus.
On 12 March 2024, Banerjee cautioned that applying for citizenship under the CAA could result in individuals being classified as illegal immigrants, risking their jobs, properties, and rights. “It’s a trap. Don’t fall for it,” she said at an administrative event.