“Natural Death” of MRSSA Bill-2020 is a failure of the MDA Government: HYC

Shillong, Jan 05: The Hynniewtrep Youths’ Council (HYC) takes serious exception to the recent statement of the Deputy Chief Minister of Meghalaya, Shri Prestone Tynsong, that the Meghalaya Residents’ Safety and Security (Amendment) Bill, 2020 is being allowed to “die a natural death,” while attributing its failure to alleged mistakes of the previous Mukul Sangma–led Government.

This statement is not a political opinion; it is a self-indictment  failure of the present Government.  A law does not “die naturally.” It is either pursued with legislative  intent or abandoned through executive inaction.

By openly acknowledging  that the MRSSA Bill has been left to lapse, the MDA Government has admitted that it chose not to exercise its full constitutional authority to  amend, strengthen, or reintroduce the legislation in the principal Act.

The record is clear and undisputed. The MRSS Amendment Bill was  introduced in the Assembly in March 2020 under the present Chief Minister.  In November 2023, the Bill was returned by the Ministry of Home Affairs for  review. From that point onwards, the Government repeatedly assured the  public of re-examination, legal consultation, and stakeholder engagement.

Yet, despite enjoying a clear majority and ample time, no amendment to the  principal Act was ever brought before the House.  Shifting responsibility to the previous regime does not absolve the present  Government. Legislative defects, if any, could have been rectified at any  stage during the MDA’s tenure. The failure to do so is not historical; it is  current.

The  HYC further notes the contradiction between repeated claims that  the Centre had “not rejected” the Bill and the present admission that it has  been allowed to lapse. These inconsistent positions only reinforce the  perception of indecision and lack of seriousness on an issue directly affecting indigenous security and demographic stability.

The Residents’ Safety framework was projected as a meaningful  alternative to ILP. Allowing it to collapse without replacement sends a  dangerous signal by this NPP-led Government that the protection of  indigenous people is negotiable, postponable, and ultimately expendable.

The HYC demands that the Government place on record, without  ambiguity, whether it intends to pursue with the Government of India to get  a strong law l with enforceable provisions or whether it has formally  abandoned the objective of a statutory entry-regulation mechanism  altogether?

Silence and evasion will only confirm what the Deputy Chief Minister’s  statement has already revealed. HYC will pursue this matter through all  democratic and constitutional means until clarity, accountability, and action  are forthcoming from this Government, said Mr. Roy Kupar Synrem, President Hynniewtrep Youths’ Council (HYC).

What Next?

Recent Articles

Leave a Reply

Submit Comment

*