The Supreme Court on Tuesday refused to extend the May 31 deadline for the ongoing process of publication of the final National Register of Citizens (NRC) in Assam in the wake of panchayat elections in the state, saying the polls should not become an impediment.
The top court, however, spared the Additional Deputy Commissioner rank officer currently engaged in NRC updating work for the local bodies elections scheduled next month.
“We have already said that the deadline for updation of NRC is May 31 and the next 30 days for cross-checking of data till June 30. It can’t go beyond that and complete final draft should be ready by then. You deploy your surplus employees or request neighbouring states, but no employee engaged in NRC work can be spared or disturbed,” a bench of Justice Ranjan Gogoi and R F Nariman said.
The bench’s remark came after the state government said the panchayat elections were due next month and urged that the employees engaged in NRC work be allowed to be deployed for the polls.
The bench said it had no intention to interfere with the panchayat polls in the state and it should be held as per schedule. But the polls shall not become impediment in the work of NRC, it added.
Additional Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, representing Assam, told the court that as per the Panchayat Constitution Rules of the state, deputy commissioner is responsible for the elections but he was currently engaged in NRC work.
“When we asked the deputy commissioner to work for polls, the state coordinator of NRC Prateek Hajela said it will be contempt of court as no officer can be engaged in any other work,” he said.
To this, the bench said if there was a statutory requirement, then the additional deputy commissioners of each district can be spared for the local bodies’ election, but no other official can be allowed to do any other job, except NRC updation.
The bench asked all state governments, railways, banks, CBSE, UIDAI and Ministry of External Affairs to assist the NRC officials in verification of the records in the stipulated period.
Mehta said if the panchayat elections are delayed in Assam, then the state will lose a grant of Rs 1000 crore, which can be given only if the elected local bodies are in place as per the recommendation of 14th Finance Commission.
During the hearing, the bench also pulled up the Registrar General of India (RGI) for “putting spanners” in the work of updation of NRC.
“Mr. Attorney General, we have received a confidential report from our sources and have found that this gentleman (Registrar General of India) is putting spanners in the work,” the bench said.
Attorney General K K Venugopal, who was present in the courtroom, asked whether the court meant that the RGI was delaying the work.
“Yes. We have received a confidential report regarding this. If that will be the case, we will not hesitate to direct for replacing the Registrar General of India,” the bench said.
RGI Shailesh was also present in the courtroom when the bench made the observation and warned him of the action. The bench posted the matter for further hearing on May 8.