MHA Formulation of New Deportation Policy for Illegal Migrants

The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) has formalized a comprehensive new policy aimed at the rapid identification and deportation of illegal migrants, with a specific focus on individuals from Bangladesh and Myanmar. This policy, framed under the Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025, mandates that all States and Union Territories establish specialized institutional mechanisms to secure national borders.

Why in News

  • MHA framed a new policy asking States to set up Special Task Forces in each district to detect and deport migrants from Bangladesh and Myanmar.
  • States must operationalize “Holding Centres” with 10-foot boundaries and barbed wires.
  • Documents like Aadhaar, Driving License, and PAN cards obtained by illegal migrants will be blacklisted on a new portal.
  • A “Foreigners Identification Portal (FIP)” has been launched for biometric capturing.

Impact

  • Economic: [NOT RELEVANT]
  • Social: Requirement to ensure family members are housed together and not separated.
  • Policy: Strict 90-day limit for nationality verification of suspected foreigners.
  • Ecological: [NOT RELEVANT]

GS Paper Focus

GS-2 — Governance: Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability.

Policies & Schemes

1. New Deportation Policy (MHA).

2. Foreigners Identification Portal (FIP).

3. Operation Sindoor (May 2025 context).

System-level Insight

The new policy signifies the “Securitization of Documentation.” By integrating district-level task forces with a national “Blacklist” portal, the state is shifting from simple border policing to an internal “biometric siege,” where the cancellation of identity documents serves as a pre-emptive administrative tool to render illegal stay unsustainable.

Interview Angle

Can the establishment of ‘Holding Centres‘ outside the jail system balance the requirements of national security with the humanitarian obligations toward undocumented migrants? Discuss.

Vocabulary

1. Overstaying — staying beyond the allowed period — Basic

2. Antecedents — a person’s ancestors or past history — Intermediate

3. Blacklisted — put on a list of people/things viewed with suspicion — Basic

4. Biometric details — physical or behavioral human characteristics — Basic

5. Holding centres — temporary detention facilities — Basic