Dual citizenship: Of what and for whom?

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The 'Pravasi Bharatiya Divas' held in honour of the Indian diaspora at Delhi in early January 2003, and the announcement of a 'national day' commemorating the return of Gandhi to India from South Africa mark a new moment in the government of India's relationship with its expatriates. But the question still remains, 'who is an Indian?'.

The long history of Indian migration to places far from India has led to a situation where Indians are now found in most parts of the world, in various states of being. In a few places, such as Indonesia and Thailand they have been assimilated to the point of near-indistinguishability; in some they have become an integral if contested element of the host country because of the size of the community (eg East Indians in Trinidad, Guyana, Fiji).  In East Africa, they are long-standing communities without a great deal of assimilation; in still others, such as the gulf, the white commonwealth and the United States, they represent economic migrants of various social and economic classes. There are other categories; these examples are intended solely as illustration of the great variety of what can be called NRIs and PIOs ('non-resident Indian' and 'people of Indian origin' respectively).

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