Mahiruddin Ahmed, who retired as a havildar from the Indian Army in 2004, along with his wife, was served notices by a foreigners tribunal in Barpeta district on September 16.
The notices claimed that both of them had entered India from Bangladesh after March 25, 1971, without any valid papers.
The tribunal had asked him to appear before it today with the proof of his citizenship, Ahmed told reporters.
Stating that he was born in 1964 in Barpeta, Ahmed wondered how could he have joined the Army if he was not an Indian citizen.
More From This Section
Last month, Mohammad Azmal Hoque, who had been a junior commissioned officer (JCO) in the Army, was asked to prove his Indian citizenship and that he was not an "illegal Bangladeshi immigrant" by a foreigners tribunal, which had charged him with entering the country in 1971 without proper documents.
Hoque, who had retired from the Army on September 30 last year, after serving in the force for 30 years, was living in Guwahati post-retirement.
"Why do I have to be humiliated so many times? I request the prime minister, president and home minister to put an end to this harassment of a citizen," said Hoque, adding that he was not the first person from his family to be served such a notice as in 2012, his wife Mamtaj Begum was also summoned by the tribunal to prove her citizenship.