Indian Polity: Citizenship (Articles 5-11)
Complete notes on Indian citizenship — constitutional provisions, acquisition, termination, CAA 2019, OCI, and NRC for Kerala PSC exams.
▶ മലയാളത്തിൽ വായിക്കുകComplete notes on Indian citizenship — constitutional provisions, acquisition, termination, CAA 2019, OCI, and NRC for Kerala PSC exams.
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Citizenship is covered in Part II (Articles 5-11) of the Indian Constitution and the Citizenship Act, 1955. Kerala PSC frequently asks about types of citizenship, acquisition methods, and recent amendments like CAA 2019. Expect 1-2 questions per paper.
Constitutional Provisions (Articles 5-11)
| Article | Subject | Content |
|---|---|---|
| Article 5 | Citizenship at commencement | Every person domiciled in India and born in India, OR whose parents were born in India, OR who has been ordinarily resident for 5+ years before Constitution commenced |
| Article 6 | Rights of migrants from Pakistan | Persons who migrated from Pakistan before 19 July 1948 became citizens if (a) born in undivided India AND (b) resident in India since migration. After 19 July 1948 — only if registered |
| Article 7 | Rights of migrants TO Pakistan | Persons who migrated to Pakistan after 1 March 1947 lost Indian citizenship; exception: those who returned on permit |
| Article 8 | NRIs of Indian origin | Persons of Indian origin residing outside India could register as citizens with diplomatic missions |
| Article 9 | Voluntary foreign citizenship | Any person who voluntarily acquires citizenship of a foreign state ceases to be Indian citizen |
| Article 10 | Continuance of citizenship | Every citizen continues to be citizen subject to any law made by Parliament |
| Article 11 | Power of Parliament | Parliament has full power to make any provision on citizenship (acquire, terminate, regulate) |
Key Principles of Indian Citizenship
| Feature | India’s Position |
|---|---|
| Single citizenship | India has single citizenship (unlike USA which has dual — federal + state) |
| No state citizenship | All Indians are citizens of India, not of individual states |
| Uniform rights | All citizens have same rights regardless of state of residence (with minor exceptions like Article 370 earlier, tribal areas) |
| Constitutional basis | Part II of Constitution + Citizenship Act, 1955 |
| Parliament’s power | Article 11 — Parliament can make any law regarding citizenship |
Citizenship Act, 1955 — Acquisition of Citizenship
| Method | Details |
|---|---|
| By Birth | Born in India on/after 26 Jan 1950 but before 1 July 1987 — citizen regardless of parents’ nationality. Born between 1 July 1987 and 2 Dec 2004 — citizen if either parent is Indian citizen. Born on/after 3 Dec 2004 — citizen only if both parents are citizens OR one parent is citizen and other is not illegal migrant |
| By Descent | Person born outside India on/after 26 Jan 1950 is citizen if father was Indian citizen at time of birth. From 1992 amendment: if either parent is citizen. Must be registered at Indian consulate within 1 year of birth |
| By Registration | Available to persons of Indian origin, spouses of Indian citizens (married 7 years), minor children of Indian citizens, etc. Application to prescribed authority |
| By Naturalisation | For foreigners; must reside in India for 12 years (11 years aggregate + 1 year immediately before application); adequate knowledge of a language in 8th Schedule; good character; intention to reside in India |
| By Incorporation of Territory | When new territory becomes part of India, Government specifies who becomes citizen (e.g., Goa 1961, Sikkim 1975) |
Termination/Loss of Citizenship
| Method | Details |
|---|---|
| Renunciation | Voluntary declaration by citizen of full age and capacity. Minor children also lose citizenship (can resume within 1 year of turning 18) |
| Termination | Automatic — if an Indian citizen voluntarily acquires citizenship of another country |
| Deprivation | Compulsory — by order of Government if: citizenship obtained by fraud; citizen disloyal to Constitution; citizen unlawfully traded with enemy; citizen ordinarily resident outside India for 7+ continuous years |
Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA), 2019
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Passed | 11 December 2019 (came into effect 10 January 2020; rules notified March 2024) |
| Amendment to | Citizenship Act, 1955 (Section 2(1)(b)) |
| Provision | Grants eligibility for Indian citizenship to persecuted religious minorities — Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis, and Christians — from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan |
| Condition | Must have entered India on or before 31 December 2014 |
| Residency relaxation | Reduces naturalisation requirement from 11 years to 5 years for these groups |
| Exclusion | Does not include Muslims from these countries |
| Does not apply to | Areas under 6th Schedule (tribal areas of Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram); states with Inner Line Permit (Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Mizoram, Manipur) |
National Register of Citizens (NRC)
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Definition | Official register of Indian citizens |
| Assam NRC | Updated under Supreme Court supervision; final list released 31 August 2019; 19.06 lakh people excluded out of 3.3 crore applicants |
| Legal basis | Citizenship Act, 1955 and Citizenship (Registration of Citizens and Issue of National Identity Cards) Rules, 2003 |
| Purpose | Identify illegal immigrants |
| Cut-off for Assam | Midnight of 24 March 1971 (based on Assam Accord, 1985) |
Overseas Citizen of India (OCI)
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Introduced | 2005 (by Citizenship Amendment Act, 2003) |
| Merged PIO + OCI | 2015 (PIO card scheme merged into OCI) |
| Who is eligible | Former Indian citizens (or their descendants up to 4 generations) who are citizens of other countries; spouse of OCI cardholder (married 2+ years) |
| Not eligible | Person who was ever citizen of Pakistan or Bangladesh |
| Rights | Multiple entry, multi-purpose lifelong visa to India; no visa required; parity with NRIs in economic, financial, educational fields (except agricultural land purchase) |
| Cannot do | Vote; hold constitutional posts (President, VP, Governor, Judge); join government services; buy agricultural land |
| Not dual citizenship | OCI is a long-term visa, NOT dual citizenship (India does not allow dual citizenship) |
Comparison: Citizen vs OCI vs Foreigner
| Right | Indian Citizen | OCI Card Holder | Foreigner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vote | Yes | No | No |
| Stand for election | Yes | No | No |
| Hold government posts | Yes | No | No |
| Visa-free travel to India | N/A | Yes (lifetime) | No |
| Buy property | Yes | Yes (except agricultural) | Restricted |
| Fundamental Rights (Art. 14, 21) | Yes | Art. 14, 21 only | Art. 14, 21 only |
| Right to reside permanently | Yes | Yes | No (needs visa) |
Important Constitutional Cases on Citizenship
| Case | Significance |
|---|---|
| Assam Sanmilita Mahasabha vs Union of India (2015) | SC directed NRC update in Assam |
| Sarbananda Sonowal vs Union of India (2005) | SC struck down IMDT Act as unconstitutional; helped pave way for NRC |
Quick Recall — PSC Favourites
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Part of Constitution dealing with citizenship? | Part II (Articles 5-11) |
| Can Parliament make laws on citizenship? | Yes — Article 11 |
| India has single or dual citizenship? | Single citizenship |
| Naturalisation requires residence of? | 12 years (11 aggregate + 1 continuous) |
| Voluntary acquisition of foreign citizenship means? | Automatic loss of Indian citizenship |
| CAA 2019 covers which countries? | Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan |
| CAA 2019 covers which religions? | Hindu, Sikh, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi, Christian |
| CAA cut-off date? | 31 December 2014 |
| NRC Assam final list year? | 2019 (31 August) |
| OCI cardholders can vote? | No |
| Does India allow dual citizenship? | No |
| Citizenship Act enacted in? | 1955 |
Related Notes
Hub: Indian Polity — Complete Guide for Kerala PSC
More on Constitutional Foundations:
Practice this topic: Preamble & Citizenship Quiz
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