New Delhi: Following the Supreme Court’s refusal on Thursday to stay the deportation of illegal Rohingya migrants on the ground that the right to reside in India was reserved for citizens, there is fear and uncertainty in Delhi’s Rohingya settlements.In Kalindi Kunj and Shram Vihar, where many of the migrants have lived for over a decade, families reported sudden detentions and untraceable deportations.At these settlements, TOI sensed a tense stillness in the air. The approach to the Kalindi Kunj and Shram Vihar habitations winds through a dusty, broken trail strewn with rubble. Around a dozen jhuggis, assembled with tarpaulin, wooden planks and rusted metal, are clustered there, most of them with no electricity or water. They have curtains for doors, no windows, not even fans to keep the Delhi heat at bay.”This is where we rebuilt our lives,” said a 25-year-old who fled Myanmar in 2012 with his wife. “We have three children now. They go to school here. When we first arrived, we didn’t know how to survive. We built these shacks with our own hands. We are grateful to India for allowing us to stay and we followed all UNHCR steps. People tell us we deserve electricity, water and toilets, but most of us are just thankful to have even these shanties. Now, even this life is under threat.”On May 6, a 26-year-old Rohingya said his entire family was torn apart. “I was at a govt hospital with my wife, who was undergoing surgery. My parents were at home taking care of our children. Later that day, my mother, father, two brothers and my sister-in-law were picked up and taken to the police station. Then they were deported,” he said in a choking voice. “We don’t know where they are now. We were never given a chance to make other arrangements. UNHCR, which once assured us of safety, is keeping silent.”His story is not unique. Another shared how his niece’s wedding had been planned for May 20. “Everything was ready, clothes, jewellery and other arrangements,” he said. “Then, suddenly, my niece and her mother, who sells vegetables in the slums, were called to the police station and later deported after biometric verification. We weren’t given a chance to prepare to leave or say goodbye. We just hope they are safe and are being treated with dignity.” The Rohingyas claim that around 40 individuals have been deported recently from across the city.Some families have lived in India 2012; others came following the 2017 upheaval in Myanmar. While their legal status is long and complex, many said they believed their presence in India was permitted on humanitarian grounds. On Thursday in the Supreme Court, the solicitor general of India assured the bench that due process would be followed with regard to the Rohingya deportation, reiterating that India did not recognise them as refugees because the country was not a signatory to the UN Refugee Convention. A police officer claimed that due process was followed with respect to the deportations. There is great anxiety among the community members about being sent back to the very violence they once fled. A 24-year-old woman sat at her jhuggi in Kalindi Kunj, her eyes swollen and red as she cried while nursing her 11-month-old baby. Struggling to speak, she said, “I learned how to sew after coming to Delhi. My husband is a labourer, and we barely make a living. But at least we felt safe here. Back in Myanmar, we know what could happen to young women and their children. Even going without water for three days here feels better than being deported.” A 30-year-old woman said, “We believed in the system. We never meant to overstay here or defy the law.” Pointing at the hand-painted drawings on the shack walls, she continued, “My 12-year-old daughter made these at school. All I want is a better future for her. You can send us back, but please don’t send our children with us. We don’t know what will happen to them. We came because we feared for our lives. We never claimed citizenship, only refuge. We only hope for clarity, safety and a little time.”