Assam chief minister Himanta Biswa Sarma has informed the state assembly that the state will have a 'population army' to distribute contraceptives and create awareness about population control in Muslim-dominated areas. A 1,000-strong force will be sent to areas in Lower Assam, he said. We are also planning to create a separate work force of ASHA workers who will be tasked with creating awareness about birth control and also supply contraceptives," he said.
"If population growth among Hindus in Assam was 10 per cent from 2001 to 2011, it was 29 per cent among Muslims," the CM added. He also said: "Owing to a smaller population, lifestyle of Hindus in Assam has become better, with spacious houses and vehicles, and children becoming doctors and engineers."
"The people of Upper Assam will not relate to the struggles that western and central Assam people face due to the burden of higher population," he said in the Assembly, adding that the state needed to educate people in these high-population areas.
The chief minister has been pushing hard for promotion of measures to counter a population explosion that, according to him, has been driven by the state's minority populations. Part of these measures are voluntary sterilisation and enforcement of a two-child limit for couples looking to access state-run welfare schemes.
Newsinc24 Team





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