SG Mehta told the court that the Centre will not make any such statements.
Jaising further told the court that the matter should be referred to a larger bench. She also later pressed the court to stay implementation of CAA as once Indian citizenship is granted it cannot be taken back. However, the CJI DY Chandrachud responded to Jaisingh, "how will they implement the rules till April 9, when they don't have an infrastructure in place.."
Prominent names among the 200 plus petitioners who have moved the top court against CAA include Tarun Gogoi, Mahua Moitra, Asaduddin Owaisi, Manoj Kumar Jha, Tehseen S Poonawalla, Harsh Mander.
The Kerala government has also challenged the CAA and rules notified by the Centre.
The CPI, CPI Marxist, Asom Gana Parishad, DMK, Tripura People Front also have challenged the CAA.
One of the petitioners, IUML, has told the apex court that they had filed a writ petition against the CAA on the day it got the President's assent in December 2019. Following which the Supreme Court issued notice to the Centre seeking its response. The Centre had then told the top court that since rules have not been made, implementation will not take place. The writ petition has been pending for 4.5 years.
The petition says that the CAA Rules, 2024 create a highly truncated and fast-tracked process for grant of citizenship to persons covered under the exemption created by Sections 2 (1)(b) of Citizenship Act.
It further states that since the CAA discriminates on the basis of religion, it strikes at the root of the concept of secularism, which is the basic structure of the Constitution. "Therefore, one way of looking at implementation of the act would be to make it religion neutral and give citizenship to all migrants irrespective of their religious status."
The petition urges the Supreme Court to pass an order staying the implementation of the CAA rules 2024 till the writ petition is pending in the top court.
It has also urged the top court to stay the operation of section 6B in CAA 2019 pertaining to grant of citizenship to persons belonging to only certain religions.
Recently, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) officially notified the implementation of the CAA, paving the way for fast-tracking citizenship to undocumented non-Muslim migrants from Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan. Under the provisions of the CAA, Indian citizenship will be granted to six minority communities - Hindus, Christians, Sikhs, Jains, Buddhists, and Parsis - who arrived in India before December 31, 2014, from these three neighboring countries.
Following this notification, a slew of such petitions and IAs were filed challenging the CAA notification.