The picture below shows an
advertisement poster of passport application service posted in front of Nyingma House at Majnu Ka Tilla. Majnu ka tilla is a colony in Delhi, India. The land was allotted by the Government of India to the Tibetan refugees in 1960. Today, it is home to second generation of Tibet refugees and is also known as Samyeling Tibetan settlement, through colloquially as "Little-Tibet" or "Mini-Tibet". There are about 3000 Tibetans living in Samyeling.
According to some sources, advertisements like this to speed up passport application process and making the application process easy for Tibetans, are now
easily seen all over Majnu Ka Tilla Delhi Tibetan settlement area. Many companies and agencies, both Indian and Tibetan are openly and boldly providing this service to the Tibetan community there.
It shows that:
(1) There is an increasing demands of Tibetans wanting to apply for Indian passport.
(2) Tibetans want the process to be fast.
(3) Tibetans are not afraid to openly admit their wish to become Indian Citizen.
(4) Tibetan government have failed to stop their own people from pursuing Indian Citizenship.
(5) This phenomena is so common that it will soon be spreaded to all other Tibetan settlements.
Under current situation, Tibetans in India who are not Indian citizen are not allowed to own land in India, are not allowed to start their own large-scale businesses and are ineligible for jobs with the government of India. As a result, Tibetans residing in India primarily work in the fields of agriculture, animal husbandry, manufacturing and selling sweaters and other textiles, and in the service industry. Younger generation of Tibetans who graduated from colleges with professional degree were also not eligible to apply for professional jobs.
Tibetan will have to obtain Indian citizenship in order to enjoy the above benefit of getting land and jobs etc. However, the process of applying for the Indian passport has never been easy for Tibetans. Part of the reason came from previous Indian policy of supporting the Tibetan cause, part came from the objection from Tibetan goverment.
CTA actually said that those who apply for Indian passport are traitors of Tibetan cause. However the scenario has started to change since last year. On 14 September 2018, High Court of Delhi issued an order to streamline processing of passport applications. On 17 September the same year, the Minister of External Affairs of India sent a directive to all the passport-issuing authorities to allow surrender of Tibetans’ Registration Certificate (RC) and Identity Certificate (IC) at their offices.
The Citizenship Law of India 1955 says that anybody born in India between 26 January 1950 and 1 July 1987 and their descendants, as per India’s citizenship law, are considered citizens of India by birth, and therefore eligible for Indian passport.
However, the MEA directive has included an old rule that said: Tibetan refugees should not be staying in any of the designated Tibetan Refugee settlements nor enjoying any CTA benefits or subsidies after receipt of an Indian passport.
Therefore, by issueing the order, India has openly said that they are no longer supporting Tibetan cause. It also means that the CTA has less influence over their Indian host.
This is not the only cause that encourage Tibetans to become Indian citizen. On one hand India has made the application process easier, on the other hand, according to some source,
the Tibetan government due to their incompetence has made the process of renewing the Tibetan card extremely slow. Some even have to wait for one year before they can get the Tibetan card renewed.
At the same time,
Tibetan government shows no effort in providing more opportunities and benefits to their own people in order to counter Indian's offer. They offer no solution to the above-mentioned problems. This contributes to the lost of confidence among Tibetan population in their government which further encourage them to pursuing Indian citizenship.
According to the Tibetan government’s advisor on Tibet Affairs Amitabh Mathur (September 11, 2018),
a sharp decline has been recorded in the number of Tibetan refugees in India — from 1.5 lakh to 85,000 in the last seven years — with a large number either migrating to the US or returning to China/Tibet. Now with this new order to streamline processing of passport applications by the Indian government, we can foresee the numbers drop will become even more obvious.
A sharp decline of Tibetan refugees in India would mean the CTA would have less and less people under their control. And with many young educated Tibetan who chose to migrate to other countries or becoming Indian citizen, the potential candidates to make up the Tibetan government will become less too. Less population and less good leadership will bring clear negative impact to the Tibetan government and further weaken their political power. Also, with less Tibetan refugees, CTA would loss their main reason to attract international sponsorship.
Domestically, those Tibetans who are becoming Indians have two ramifications, they will have to work for their own livelihood and not ask for handouts.
Because of that, the CTA can no longer ask the Indian government for further aid, handouts assistance, etc. So in that way the CTA is going to lose out even more.For the past 60 years, Tibetans have refused Indian citizenship with the hope of going back to Tibet. They would rather endure working labour job, owning no properties, and travel nowhere.
His Holiness the Dalai Lama is the leader of all Tibetans in exile. He has not applied for Indian citizenship and is still a refugee. So why are Tibetans now rushing to apply Indian citizenships? By becoming naturalized Indians, they are basically saying they have given up fighting for the Tibetan cause and are now telling the world that they agree that Tibet is a part of China. As this trend continues, with no financial resources and real political power, and less and less Tibetan people to 'govern' we can foresee that CTA will gradually become even more insignificant in the world arena. Whatever policy that they implemented or trying to implement would have not much effect. When the day comes, it will be a great news for all Dorje Shugden practitioners as the Dorje Shugden ban will bear no effect anymore.