From the BBC:
“When Delhi
and London colluded to deny passports to Indians”
(More than a
million Indians migrated to all corners of the British Empire like Jamaica
(here) to carry out indentured labour – 1905)
In 1967,
India's Supreme Court ruled that holding a passport and travelling abroad was a
fundamental right of every citizen. It was a landmark decision because until
then the passport was largely considered a document of privilege and would be
given to only those who were "respectable" or "worthy"
enough to represent India and "uphold its honour aboard". For long
the passport was regarded as a "civil credential" meant only for Indians
of "means, education and standing", according to Radhika Singha, a
historian at Delhi's Jawaharlal Nehru University. It was, therefore, not given
to labourers who worked in Malaya, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) and Burma (now
Myanmar) and to the so-called "coolies", who comprised over a million
Indians who migrated to all corners of the British Empire to carry out
indentured labour. "Such a stark delineation effectively made the Indian
passport-holder as a state sanctioned, desirable representative of India,
defined in opposition to the 'undesirable' 'coolie', a narrative that continued
to shape India's passport regime after 1947," says Kalathmika Natarajan, a
historian at the University of Exeter.
Dr Natarajan
trawled through archives to find out more about India's discriminatory system
of granting passports. Freedom from British rule did not alter things - the new
post-colonial state, she says, continued to treat a "certain category of
its own 'undesirable' citizens with much the same hierarchical, discriminatory
lens as the colonial state". This discrimination, Dr Natarajan notes, was
deeply rooted in a mentality that travelling abroad involved "self respect
and 'izzat' (honour) of India and could be only "undertaken by those
possessing the right 'bit of India', so to speak". So the government
effectively called on officers to identify citizens who would not
"embarrass" India abroad. It helped that state governments were in
charge of issuing passports until 1954. By denying passports to most people,
India also sought to construct a "desirable" diaspora.
(Mahatma
Gandhi passport application form for his travel to Europe, India, Asia, 1931)
As scholars
like Dr Natarajan have found, this was also done in connivance with British
officials to prevent the mobility of lower caste and class citizens seeking to
emigrate to Britain after 1947. (The British Nationality Act of 1948 allowed
Indian migrants to enter Britain freely after Independence - according to the
law, Indian residents within and outside India were British subjects.) Officials
in both countries constructed a category of Indians who were regarded - to
varying degrees, by both sides - as "undesirable" for entry into
Britain.
Both countries
stood to gain. For the Indians, this meant choking the mobility of
"unsuitable" lower caste and poorer Indians - the legatees of the
"coolie" - who would likely "embarrass India in the West".
For Britain, this would help stem the tide of "coloured immigrants"
and the "pedlar class" of Indians in particular, according to Dr
Natarajan. A 1958 internal report in Britain on the "problems"
arising from the influx of coloured immigrants noted the differences between
West Indian immigrants who "are mostly of a good type who fit fairly
easily into British society", and Indians and Pakistanis who "are
greatly handicapped by their inability to speak English and their lack of any
kind of skill". The class backgrounds of immigrants entering Britain from
the subcontinent - "mostly unskilled simple peasants who knew no
English" - seemed "ominous" to the British, Dr Natarajan says.
(Immigrant
children, learning English, 15th May 1962. Jasubin Patel, 16, and Zulekna Gora,
12 - two Indian immigrants adopted by Whetley Lane Secondary School in
Bradford, Yorkshire - make a tape recording as part of a lesson to improve
their English. The girls are from Bombay and are among a party of ten immigrant
children drafted to the school as an experiment, after Bradford education
authorities discovered that many immigrant children in the city knew so little
English that they couldn't understand their lessons.)
A British
official belonging to the Commonwealth Relations Office in early 1950s said in
a letter that Indian officials had "expressed undisguised pleasure"
that the Home Office "found it possible to turn away certain
would-be-migrants". The most marginalised communities - like the
"scheduled" castes or Dalits who account for more than 230 million of
India's 1.4 billion population today - were denied passports along with
political "undesirables" such as members of the Communist Party of
India, scholars found. In the 1960s guidelines to provide passports to MPs,
legislators and councillors without financial guarantees and security checks
were flouted by denying passports to members of a raft of formerly secessionist
regional parties like Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK).
There were
many ways to restrict passports. Applicants had to sit for literacy - and
English - tests, have enough money, and adhere to public health regulations.
British Indian writer Dilip Hiro recounted that it took him six months in 1957
to secure a passport in India "despite having "good academic
qualifications and financial references". Such oppressive control led to
unforeseen consequences: many Indians acquired forged passports. Following such
a scandal, "illiterate or semi-literate Indians" who did not know
English were briefly made ineligible for a passport between 1959 and 1960. Clearly,
for close to two decades, India's passport system for those who wished to
travel to the West remained exclusionary.
This found a
sudden echo in 2018 when Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government announced
plans for a new category of "orange" passports - as opposed to the
ubiquitous navy blue ones - for unskilled Indians with limited education
"with a view to help and assist them on priority basis". An outcry
prompted the government to junk the proposal. Such a scheme, Dr Natarajan says,
merely reflected India's "long-standing view of the international as a
space for which the upper caste and class Indians were deemed best-suited".
^ This was
very interesting and something I didn’t know about. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-62318476
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