Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Hindu
The Hindu
National
PTI

Once declared ‘Indian’ by FTs, a person cannot be branded as foreigner later: Gauhati HC

The Gauhati High Court has ruled that if a person has been declared an Indian citizen by a Foreigners Tribunal [FT] in Assam, he or she cannot be tried for a second time in the tribunal and stamped as a foreigner.

A Division Bench of Justices N. Kotiswara Singh and Malashri Nandy, in a recent order passed on a set of 12 petitions, stated that the principle of ‘res judicata’ [meaning that once the matter has been decided it cannot be reopened by the same parties] was applicable to the FTs in the state.

The High Court observed that the common theme which runs through the batch of writ petitions filed before them is the applicability of the principle of ‘res judicata’.

The petitioners’ contentions are based on the Supreme Court’s decision in the case of one Abdul Kuddus that subsequent proceedings before the FTs are barred by the principle of ‘res judicata’.

The Court directed that whenever a petitioner takes the plea of applicability of ‘res judicata’ on the ground that he had already been declared an Indian by the FT in an earlier proceeding, the tribunal has to first determine whether the petitioner is the same person who was proceeded in the earlier case or not.

“For that purpose, there can be examination of evidence in the form of oral documents and evidence and if the tribunal comes to the conclusion that the person was the same as in the earlier proceeding, there is no need to go into the merit of the case any further,” the judges ruled.

On the plea of applicability of ‘res judicata’, the subsequent proceeding shall be closed, without any further examination, on the basis of the earlier opinion that the person was not a foreigner, the order stated.

The order is a reiteration of a similar judgment passed by the Gauhati High Court in December 2021 where it was observed that the Supreme Court’s decision on the principle of ‘res judicata’ being applicable even in a proceeding before the FT also makes the FT’s opinion not sustainable as that issue had already been settled.

A Division Bench had ordered the release of Hasina Bhanu alias Hasna Bhanu from Tezpur Jail, as she was declared ‘Indian’ in 2016 and again a ‘foreigner’ in 2021 by the same FT, and, therefore, the proceedings against her could not sustain as it was the same person in both the cases.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.