Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025

Why in News: MHA notified Rules & Orders under the Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025, giving new powers to Foreigners Tribunals and granting exemptions to certain groups.

Introduction

  • The Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025 consolidates and replaces multiple colonial-era legislations to provide a uniform framework for regulating foreigners, immigration, visas, and registration. 

New Powers and Institutional Roles

Foreigners Tribunals (FTs):

  • Granted powers of a First-Class Judicial Magistrate.
  • Can issue arrest warrants and send individuals without valid nationality proof to detention centres.
  • Ex-parte orders may be set aside if reviewed within 30 days.
  • Membership capped at three per tribunal.
  • Currently, 100 FTs operational in Assam, expanded after NRC 2019.

Bureau of Immigration (BOI):

  • Legally designated for the first time.
  • Can investigate immigration fraud.
  • Maintains national immigration database.
  • Coordinates with States on deportation and movement restrictions.

Educational Institutions:

  • Must report foreign students’ attendance, academic performance, and conduct.
  • Strengthens academic oversight for visa compliance.

Border Guarding Forces:

  • BSF, Assam Rifles and Coast Guard legally empowered.
  • Can push back illegal entrants at borders.
  • Must record biometric and demographic details before repatriation.

Exemption Orders

Exempted Categories:

  • Citizens of Nepal and Bhutan.
  • Tibetans already settled in India.
  • Sri Lankan Tamils sheltered in India up to January 9, 2015.
  • Six minority communities (Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis, Christians) from Afghanistan, Bangladesh, and Pakistan, if entered without valid documents before December 31, 2024.

Conclusion

The 2025 Act marks a shift from fragmented colonial laws to a consolidated immigration framework. It strengthens tribunals and border agencies, institutionalises biometric and academic monitoring, while balancing humanitarian exemptions with national security concerns.

GS Paper 2 – Governance, Constitution, Polity, Social Justice & IR

  • Role of tribunals and judicial oversight in citizenship matters.

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