A 66-year-old woman recently approached the Bombay High Court seeking directions to authorities to grant her Indian citizenship as she has been married to an Indian for the last 45 years and her children and grandchildren are all Indian citizens. The court has asked the Centre to file its response to the woman’s plea.
The woman said she was born in Uganda to Indian-origin parents holding British passports and she had come to India on her mother’s passport in 1966 and has been residing in the country since then, but did not have any valid documents or papers. The woman married an Indian citizen in 1977.
The woman, who was born in September 1955 and now resides in Andheri, stated that her application for registration as an Indian citizen was rejected by the deputy collector of Mumbai in 2019 due to some inadvertent mistake on her part and she sought the high court to direct the authorities to reconsider her application and grant her Indian citizenship.A division bench of Justices S V Gangapurwala and S M Modak was informed by advocate Aditya Chitale, for the petitioner, that she had been residing in India since 1966 when she came with her mother and wrongly mentioned on her online application that her visa was valid till 2019 and therefore she was held not eligible for Indian citizenship by authorities, prompting her to approach the high court.
The petitioner said she had applied for citizenship to get an Indian passport and had applied for passport thrice; while doing so, she had tried to submit the British passports of her parents. However, she was asked to submit documents showing how she travelled to India, which she did not possess.
The Regional Passport Office had directed the petitioner to apply for citizenship to get a passport, after which she applied for citizenship online, which was rejected by the authority. Advocate Advait Sethna, representing the Ministry of External Affairs, submitted that the woman could be granted citizenship if she produced some passport of a foreign country. He said that the petitioner had approached the British Embassy since her parents held British passports; however, the British embassy had refused to grant her passport as she did not possess the required documents.
Sethna assured that the petitioner could approach the embassy in Uganda to get the requisite documents from them and the Centre was not treating the petition as adversarial.