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This story is from June 8, 2019

Former Armyman detained as ‘foreigner’ in Assam gets bail

The bench of Justices Manojit Bhuyan and Prasanta Kumar Deka ordered that Sanaullah, 52, be released on bail after furnishing a bail bond of Rs 20,000 with two local sureties. The court directed him not to move out of the territorial limits of Kamrup district without the prior approval of superintendent of police.
Former Armyman detained as ‘foreigner’ in Assam gets bail
Sanaullah (in picture) retired from the Army in 2017 as an honourary lieutenant after which he had joined Assam Police as an assistant sub-inspector
Key Highlights
  • The court ordered that Sanaullah be released on bail after furnishing a bail bond of Rs 20,000 with two local sureties
  • The court directed him not to move out of the territorial limits of Kamrup district without the prior approval
GUWAHATI: The Gauhati HC on Friday granted conditional interim bail to former armyman Mohammad Sanaullah, who was sent to a detention camp on May 28 after a Foreigners’ Tribunal in Assam declared him as an ‘illegal foreigner’.
The bench of Justices Manojit Bhuyan and Prasanta Kumar Deka ordered that Sanaullah, 52, be released on bail after furnishing a bail bond of Rs 20,000 with two local sureties.
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The court directed him not to move out of the territorial limits of Kamrup district without the prior approval of superintendent of police. The bench has also directed the authorities to obtain the biometrics of Sanaullah before releasing him.
Challenging the tribunal’s order, Sanaullah had moved the HC on May 31. He had also filed an interlocutory application, seeking his release from detention.
Sanaullah retired from the Army in 2017 as an honourary lieutenant after which he had joined Assam Police as an assistant sub-inspector.
In September 2018, proceedings against Sanaullah under Foreigners’ Act were initiated on the basis of a 2008 report of Assam Border Police, the same wing of Assam Police in which Sanaullah later worked, to the tribunal that he was an ‘illegal migrant’.
Border Police officer Chandramal Das, who had inquired and reported that Sanaullah was an illegal foreigner, had mentioned his profession as ‘labourer’ in the report. It also incorporated a purported ‘confessional statement’ of Sanaullah that he had illegally entered India ‘through a secret route’.
author
About the Author
Prabin Kalita

Prabin Kalita is a journalist at The Times of India and is currently the Chief of Bureau (northeast). He has been reporting in mainstream Indian national media since 2001. He has been a field journalist reporting gamut of issues from India’s northeastern region and major developments in neighbouring countries like Myanmar, China, Bhutan and Bangladesh concerning India and northeastern region. He has been covering insurgency—internal and cross-border, politics, natural calamities, environment etc. He is a post-graduate in Geological Sciences from Gauhati University.

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