History of OBC Reservation

Under Article 340 of the Indian constitution it is obligatory for the government to promote the welfare of the Other Backward Classes.

The first Backward Classes Commission headed by Shri kaka kalelkar in 1953, and Mandal Commission headed by Shri B.P.Mandal in 1980 has given many useful recommendations for the welfare of Other Backward Classes. The population of OBC’s which includes Hindus and Non-Hindus was around 52% of the total population according to the commission.

27% of reservation was recommended owing to legal constraints that the total quantum of reservation should not exceed 50%.

One of the most important recommendations is that all private sector undertakings which have received financial assistance from the government in one form or another should be obliged to recruit personnel on the reservation basis. But, even after 2 decades we are unable to get it inspite of our continuous efforts.

On August 7 1990, the then Prime Minister Shri. V P Singh announced that his National Front Government was going to implement Mandal Commission recommendations in Education and jobs, inspite of strong agitations from Forward Communities. In fact, Shri V P Singh lost his power due to his mandalisation policy. The federation remembers him on this special day for his service rendered to this community.

One needs to understand the psychology of opposition of reservation to OBC’s.

When the jobs are nowhere and everything is gone private, then why are the upper castes angry with the reservation for Backward Communities?

The fact is that seats for dalits were rarely fulfilled and we have seen huge backlog. There has been no protest. It was easier to curtail the protest of the dalits because of their numbers and social background.

Now the reservation for backward communities being a reality, the powerful backward communities will hit and break the bone of upper castes. That is the fear of this community. They know that there are enough students from these communities who will join great institutes of technology and management.

The Supreme Court of India on April 10 2008 upheld the government’s move for initiating 27% OBC quotas in Govt. funded Institutions. But it is necessary for the Govt. at this juncture to exclude the creamy layer policy from the reservation quota.

To be strong in the present scenario, it is more important to show our strength and unity of OBC’s. AIOBC association work towards social justice. AIOBC is giving hand and helping us in this regard.

The issue of under-representation of the socio-economically deprived, discriminated backward caste and classes in the spheres of education, employment, administration and commerce is burning at this stage. I appeal all the member associations to work hard towards the success of the reservation policies.

Let us truly reform our society and work for a truly democratic India, where every community participates in power and every person gets their reservation in respective areas in proportion to their shares in population.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Congress to ensure adequate seats for OBC candidates in Karnataka

Bangalore, Dec 8 : Congress today said it will ensure allocation of adequate seats to candidates belonging to Other Backward Classes (OBC) in the Taluk and Zilla Panchayat Elections in Karnataka.
Speaking to reporters here, KPCC President a Parameshwar said following BJP Government's ''anti-OBC stance'', the number of seats reserved for the OBC category was reduced drastically in the wake of the May 5 Judgement of the Supreme Court.He said the party had already initiated process of selecting the candidates for the elections and named Observers for all the districts.
He said, ''party had issued guidelines to the observers to ensure 50 per cent seats for youngsters in the age group between 21 and 45 and also candidates belonging to OBC category''.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

INCLUSION OF CASTES IN SC & OBC CATEGORIES(Monday, November 29, 2010)

Bhujbal demands job reservation for OBC’s

Pune, Nov 28: Maharashtra Tourism Minister and a firebrand OBC leader Chaggan Bhujbal today demanded that job reservation should be given to the people of Other Backward Classes as early as possible.
He was addressing the maiden OBC meeting, organised by the Akhil Bharatiya Mahatma Phule Samata Parishad, at the B J Medical College ground here, where lakhs of people from nearby districts like Beed, Nasik and Pune attended.
Mr Bhujbal said, ''The OBCs are in need of job reservation and we shall put a demand for this before the government, so that it can give reservation for the overall development of the people belonging to OBCs.
Earlier in the day, state Governer K Sankaranaryan unveiled the statue of Savitribai Phule at the Mahatma Phule Wada, before announcing the inauguration of Akhil Bharatiya Mahatma Phule Samata meeting.
Incidentally, the chief guests -- Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan and Union Agriculture Minister and NCP chief Sharad Pawar -- could not grace the programme due to their tight schedule, said the organisers.
The programme was arranged to show Mr Bhujbal's popularity among the OBC people, they added.
--UNI

OBC candidates can seek admission under general category: HC, New Delhi.

New Delhi, November 29, 2010: In a landmark ruling benefiting the OBC category, the Delhi High Court has said quota candidates appearing in a competitive exam for professional courses are eligible to seek admission under the general category if he/she qualifies on merit, as “efficiency was paramount” A student may appear in the preliminary examination as an OBC candidate. If he qualifies under the OBC category, he may put forth his claim. However, if he secures more marks than the general candidates, he would be justified to seek admission under general category,” the court ruled.
Chief justice Dipak Misra and justice Manmohan said this while directing the CBSE and the Directorate General of Health Services to admit OBC candidate Tejpal Yadav to a medical course under general category from the next academic year. Yadav won the seat after a seven-year legal battle as he had qualified in the JEE in 2003. He moved a two-judge bench against a single-judge order, saying that he could apply only under OBC quota.
“Single judge’s interpretation defeats the very objective of the reservation policy,” the bench said. Yadav secured 49.2% marks in prelims of the All India Pre-Medical. In the mains, he scored 72.3% and got a rank of 2,965 in the general category and 1,179 in OBC category.
During counselling, he was told seats under OBC had already been filled up. Seats were available under general category but his admission letter specified that he was eligible to seek admission only under the OBC quota.
RK Saini, Yadav's lawyer, argued that since he secured 72.3% marks in mains, he qualified on the basis of merit as well.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

‘It is a blow to OBC interests'

Bidar: A recent Ordinance of the State Government amends the Karnataka Panchayat Raj Act and caps the reservation to various deprived communities at 50 per cent. This means that half the seats are available to general merit candidates. This, according to the Ordinance, will be achieved by keeping the reservation for SC/STs intact and reducing the number of seats reserved for OBCs.
Many backward class leaders have opposed this move as they say it will affect the balance of political power in the villages.
This will impact the political system at the grassroots levels. The order will reduce the total number of OBC seats in zilla panchayats to 223 from 334. This is an average reduction of 33 per cent. The new seat matrix has been published on the State Election Commission's website www.karsec.gov.in.
The worst affected district is Raichur where the reduction will be 84 per cent. The zilla panchayat in this district has 35 seats. The OBC seats there would be reduced to 2 from 12.
In Chitradurga, the reduction in seats would be to 3 from 11 (75 per cent). In Bidar, to 3 from 10 (73 p.c.), Bellary, 3 from 10 (70 p.c.), Kolar, 7 from 18 (62 p.c.), Chamarajanagar, 3 from 7 (58 p.c.), Mysore 7 from 15 (54 p.c.), Davangere 5 from 11 (55 p.c.), Bangalore Urban 5 from 9 (55 p.c.). Districts where there will be no change are Dakshina Kannada, Udupi, Mandya, Dharwad and Uttara Kannada.
Taluk panchayats will also witness significant changes. As many as nine taluk panchayats will not have any seats reserved for OBC or minority community members.
“It is fatal to the welfare of the backward classes. It destroys the concept of proportional representation to these sections. It is unconstitutional and should be withdrawn,” says former chairman of the backward classes commission Ravivarma Kumar.
According to him, the 50 per cent cap on reservation fixed by the Supreme Court was only for education and employment and not political reservation.
“Reducing the quantum of reservation for backward classes amounts to supporting the politically overrepresented castes. Over the years, Lingayats and Vokkaligas, who together form about 25 per cent of the State's population, have been winning over 50 per cent seats in the State Assembly. If these seats are reserved, OBCs and minorities will be kept out of the local self-government system for ever,” says Congress MLC Khaji Arshed Ali. He and some other Congress leaders are planning to challenge the Government Order in the High Court.
Janata Dal (S) leader and former Law Minister M.C. Nanaiah has questioned the wisdom of the Government in going in for an Ordinance to make such an important change in the reservation policy.
Minister for Rural Development and Panchayat Raj Jagadish Shettar ruled out withdrawing the Ordinance or the order. He said that the matrix was fixed according to the Supreme Court order in the Mandal case and was legal and valid.

Calcutta High Court asks govt to file affidavit on OBC reservation

Kolkata, Nov 26: A suit challenging the West Bengal government's decision to reserve ten per cent for the most backward classes was admitted at Calcutta High Court today. The court asked the authorities to explain its stand on the issue through an affidavit in four weeks.

The state government had announced to include 52 Muslim and four Hindu communities among the most backward classes in the last Assembly session.The suit was filed by Confederation of OBC, SC, ST and Minorities of West Bengal president Nilmadhab Karmakar.

Moving the petition before the bench of Chief Justice Joy Narayan Patel and Justice Asim Roy, counsel for the petitioner, Kartik Kapas told the court that the government's decision to create '' the most backward classes'' among the OBC as recommended by Mandal Commission in 1979 was irrational.

Kapas contended before the bench that the government had set up State Backward Class Commission in 1993 and included 63 castes in OBC between 1993 and 2010.

The state government reserved only seven per cent for the OBC in higher education and service against Mandal Commission's recommendation of 27 per cent.

''We wonder why the state created the most backward class and announced ten per cent reservation for the category,'' he argued before the court.

Counsel Pratik Dhar appeared for the government.

The matter will again come up for hearing after four weeks.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Centre clears caste in Census 2011



Standalone exercise in June-September next
New Delhi: A focussed, stand-alone, house-to-house caste headcount will be conducted between June and September 2011, after the National Population Register (NPR) is ready.
This decision comes after five months of wrangling among political parties, first over whether to undertake caste enumeration or not, and then over the method of doing it.
The Union Cabinet, after considering the recommendations of the Group of Ministers headed by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, gave its approval on Thursday, paving the way for inclusion of caste in Census 2011.
“After considering various options, the option that we have approved is based on the responses of various political parties: that caste must be canvassed and the integrity of the headcount must not be affected,” Home Minister P. Chidambaram told journalists. Every point of view was “accommodated and the time table drawn up.”
As for the additional cost for the exercise, he said it would be “assessed” at a separate meeting.
Mr. Chidambaram, however, parried a question whether caste enumeration would be merged with the headcount.
Doing so could be contentious, as there are two views on this: those who favour the merger say that correlating the caste identities of people with their educational and economic status will help to map the population better, thus facilitating a more accurate targeting of welfare schemes. But those who oppose it fear that making such connections might lead to a demand for larger quotas.
Sources in the government said this would be a “focussed exercise.” They stressed that the enumerators would be working on a verified data base — the NPR — and so the integrity of the data would be maintained. Those being enumerated would be asked to name their caste, but they would have the option of saying “No caste,” said the sources. Later, the raw data collected would be analysed by an expert group, set up by the Centre.
The Office of the Registrar-General and Census Commissioner would be “legally empowered” to collect caste data by putting in place a suitable legal regime.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

OBC MPs meet PM, Speaker; seek parliamentary committee


NEW DELHI: Members of Parliament from different parties belonging to Other Backward Classes (OBCs) met Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Lok Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar here to seek the constitution of a parliamentary committee for OBCs to monitor implementation of reservation.

The MPs said the committee headed by an OBC MP could also look into the difficulties faced by OBCs in getting reservation in Central government jobs and educational institutions.

The MPs, part of the Parliamentary forum of OBC MPs, also told Singh that there was an urgent need to constitute a Parliamentary Committee for OBCs on the lines of the one for the Scheduled Castes and Tribes. This was needed to ensure the implementation of reservation to OBCs and see that their grievances are redressed fairly in all government departments, they said. The MPs also submitted a memorandum to the Prime Minister complaining that the National Commission for Backward Classes does not have any powers to inquire and investigate into the representations by OBC associations or employees. 
While money is being spent by the government on the scheme for OBCs, there is no mechanism to monitor as to whether it really reaches the deserving OBC people, they felt. "Even in respect of providing 27 per cent reservation in education, where the UPA government has earmarked a huge sum of Rs 17000 crore...to enable OBC students to enter into higher educational institutions, we have received lots of representations that the directives of the HRD ministry are being violated and the seats alloted to OBCs are being transferred to general categories," the memorandum said. The Prime Minister has assured the delegation that he will refer this matter to Lok Sabha Speaker Meira Kumar, sources said.
A delegation of 50 MPs from the Parliamentary Forum of OBC headed by Rajya Sabha member and convenor V. Hanumantha Rao pointed out to Dr.Singh and Ms. Kumar that the OBC reservation policy was not implemented properly and there was no mechanism to monitor it. The signatories to the memorandum include Union Minister of State for Planning and Parliamentary Affairs V. Narayanasamy, Minister of State for Communications and Information Technology Sachin Pilot, Minister of State for Power Bharatsinh Solanki, the former Karnataka Chief Minister Dharam Singh and representatives of the Samajwadi Party, Janata Dal (United), Bharatiya Janata Party, AIADMK, DMK and PMK.

Monday, August 23, 2010

69 சதவிகித சட்டத்தைப் பாதுகாப்பதே முன்னுரிமைப் பணியாகும் கட்சிகளைக் கடந்த ஒத்துழைப்புத் தேவை!

முதல்வர் கருத்தை வரவேற்கிறது திராவிடர் கழகம்

69 சதவிகித சட்டத்தைப் பாதுகாப்பதே முன்னுரிமைப் பணியாகும்
கட்சிகளைக் கடந்த ஒத்துழைப்புத் தேவை! தமிழர் தலைவர் அறிக்கை



தமிழ்நாட்டில் கடந்த 30 ஆண்டுகளாக நடை முறையில் இருந்துவரும் 68-69 (68+1) சதவிகித இட ஒதுக்கீடுசமூகநீதிச் சட்டம் பல்வேறு எதிர்நீச்சல் களைக் கடந்து வந்த ஒரு வழிகாட்டிடும் சட்டமாகும்.

இதில் திராவிடர் கழகத்தின் பங்களிப்பு என்ன, எப்படிப்பட்டது என்பது நாடறிந்த ஒன்றாகும். தந்தை பெரியாரும், அவர்தம் இயக்கமும் என்றுமே நன்றியை எதிர்பார்க்காத நன்றி பாராட்டாத ஒரு சமூகப் புரட்சி இயக்கமாகும்!

தமிழ்நாட்டு மண்ணின் மனோபாவம்

தமிழ்நாட்டின் மண்ணில் சமூகநீதி இரண்டறக் கலந்த ஒன்று. மண்ணின் மனோபாவம் (ளுடிடை ஞளலஉடிடடிபல) என்பது சமூகநீதியாகும்.

அரசியல் கட்சிகளைப் பொறுத்தவரை, இங்கே இட ஒதுக்கீட்டினை எதிர்க்கக் கூடிய துணிவு எவருக்கும் கிடையாது; காரணம் வாக்கு வங்கியை அது வெகுவாகப் பாதிக்கும் என்பது 1980 ஆம் ஆண்டு நாடாளுமன்றத் தேர்தலில் அன்றைய ஆளுங்கட்சி (அ.இ.அ.தி.மு.க.) உணர்ந்த ஒன்றாகும்.

இந்த 69 சதவிகிதச் சட்டத்தை 31(சி) பிரிவின்கீழ் பாதுகாப்புடன் தமிழக சட்டமன்றத்தில் அன்றைய முதல்வர் ஜெயலலிதா அம்மையார் நிறைவேற்றிய போதுகூட, தி.மு.க. உள்பட மற்ற எதிர்க்கட்சிகள் எதிர்க்காமல் ஏகமனதாக நிறைவேற்றிடவே தத்தம் ஒத்துழைப்பை அளித்தனர். அரசியலின் தன்மைக் கேற்ப விமர்சனங்கள் இருந்திருக்கலாம்; அது இப்போது முக்கியம் அல்ல!

தற்போது உச்சநீதிமன்றத்தின் தலைமை நீதிபதி உள்பட மூவர் கொண்ட அமர்வு இந்த 69 சதவிகித வழக்கில் தந்த ஆணை (டீசனநச) ஓர் இடைக்காலத் தீர்ப்புபோல் அமைந்து, ஒரு நல்ல வழியைக் காட்டியதாக அமைந்தது.


நம்முன் உள்ளது 69 விழுக்காட்டைக் காப்பதே!

ஓராண்டு கால அவகாசத்தில், தமிழ்நாடு பிற்படுத்தப்பட்டோர் நல ஆணையம் திரட்டும் புள்ளி விவரத்தின்மீது, இந்தச் சட்டம் சரியானது என்பதை நிரூபித்து, நிரந்தரமாக்கிட, மாநில அரசு பங்களிப்பை ஏற்பது போன்று அது தெளிவாகக் கூறிவிட்டது.

இந்நிலையில், நமது முதல்வர் கலைஞர் அவர்கள் நேற்று ஒரு பேட்டியில் குறிப்பிட்டிருப்பது மிகவும் சிந்திக்கத்தக்கது; வரவேற்கத்தகுந்தது.

இருப்பதை 69 சதவிகிதச் சட்டத்தை முதலில் காப்பாற்றுவதே நம் அனைவரின் முன்னுரிமையாக, முதற்கடமையாக, முக்கிய கவலையாக இருக்க வேண்டும். கவனம் சிதறக்கூடாது.

அரசியல் கட்சித் தலைவர்களுக்கு நமது வேண்டுகோள்!

நமது அரசியல் கட்சித் தலைவர்களுக்கு திராவிடர் கழகத்தின் அன்பான, கனிவான வேண்டுகோள் இதுதான்:

அருள்கூர்ந்து கடந்தகால குற்றச்சாற்று பட்டி யல்களை ஒருவருக்கொருவர் நீட்டாமல், நல் வாய்ப்பாக அமைந்துள்ள நற்சூழ்நிலையைப் பயன்படுத்தி, 69 சதவிகித இட ஒதுக்கீட்டுச் சட்டத்தை அதனை விழுங்கிட எண்ணி வாய் பிளக்கும் சமூகநீதி எதிர்ப்பு ஓநாய்களிடமிருந்து காப்பாற்றுவது எப்படி என்பது ஒன்றே பொதுக் கண்ணோட்டமாக இருக்கவேண்டும்.

இலக்குதான் முக்கியம்!

இலக்கு மட்டும்தான், வில் எடுத்து நாணேற்றிய வருக்குத் தெரிய வேண்டுமே தவிர, வேறு எதுவும் தெரியக்கூடாது என்பதுபோல, 69 சதவிகித சட்டத்தில் யாருக்கு முன்பு எவ்வளவு பங்கு என்று ஆராய்வதைவிட, அதைக் காப்பாற்றுவதில் அவரவர் ஆற்றிடும் பங்களிப்பை சமூகத்தின் வரலாற்றில் பதிய வைக்கவேண்டிய கடமை, அனைத்து அரசியல் கட்சிகளுக்கும், சமூக அமைப்புகளுக்கும் உண்டு. அதுவே இன்றைய அவசரத் தேவை.

முதலமைச்சர் கவலையுடன் தெரிவித்திருப்பது..

இப்போது ஒவ்வொருவரும் ஒவ்வொன்றின் பக்கம் இழுத்தால், கிடைத்ததை நாம் இழந்துவிடும் அபாயம் வந்துவிடக் கூடும். இவ்வகையில் நமது முதல்வர் கலைஞர் மிகுந்த கவலையுடன் கூறியுள்ளதை, ஒவ்வொருவரும் அரசியலுக்கு அப்பாற்பட்டு சிந்தித்துச் செயல்படவேண்டும் எனக் கேட்டுக் கொள்கிறோம்.

சமூகநீதியில் தெளிவும், ஆற்றலும், அனுபவமும் வாய்ந்த ஓய்வு பெற்ற உயர்நீதிமன்ற நீதியரசர் மாண்புமிகு எம்.எஸ். ஜனார்த்தனம் அவர்களது பதவிக் காலத்தை மேலும் இரண்டாண்டு நீட்டித்து, தமிழக அரசு முதல்வர் ஆணை பிறப்பித்திருப்பது இப்பணியின் முதல் கட்ட முக்கியப் பணியாகும்.

பெற்றதைவிட பெறவேண்டியதே அதிகம்!

குறுக்குச்சால் ஓட்டாமல் அனைத்துக் கட்சித் தலைவர்களும், அமைப்புகளும் இந்த ஆணையம் (தமிழ்நாடு பிற்படுத்தப்பட்டோர் நல ஆணையம்) எடுக்கும் முயற்சிகளுக்கு முழு ஆதரவினைத் தர முன்வரவேண்டும்.

சமூகநீதியைப் பொறுத்தவரை நாம் பெற்றதைவிட, பெறவேண்டியது இன்னும் எவ்வளவோ உண்டு.

எடுத்துக்காட்டாக, வகுப்புவாரியாக இட ஒதுக்கீடு (Proportional Reservation), தனியார் துறையில் இட ஒதுக்கீடு, உயர்நீதித் துறையில் இட ஒதுக்கீடு இப்படிப் பலப்பல உண்டு.

அதனையெல்லாம் இப்போது போட்டு குழப்பிக் கொண்டிராமல், 69 சதவிகித சட்டத்தைப் பாதுகாத்து உரிமையை நாட்டும் முதற்பணியில் முழு வீச்சுடன் முழுக் கவலையைக் காட்ட வேண்டுகிறோம்.


                                                                                                                                    தலைவர்,
                                                                                                                                   
                                                                                                                                 
                                                                                                                            திராவிடர் கழகம்.



30.7.2010

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Govt Mulls Reservation for Muslims Through OBC Route

Government is actively considering reservation for Muslims through the Other Backward Castes (OBC) route, Minority Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid has said.

"We are actively looking at the reservation issue. We have a commitment in our (Congress) manifesto. I am pushing for it all the time ....Congress leadership is committed to the issue and there is no shred of doubt about it," he told PTI in an interview here.

Khurshid was replying to questions on whether the government is ready to implement the recommendations of the Ranganath Mishra Commission for reservation to Minorities.

The Commission, whose report was tabled in Parliament in December last year, had recommended 10 per cent reservation for Muslims and five per cent for other minorities in government jobs.

The Commission had also suggested an alternative route for reservation to minorities if there is "insurmountable difficulty" in implementing the recommendation for 15 per cent reservation.

According to the Mandal Commission report, minorities constitute 8.4 per cent of the total OBC population. So in the 27 per cent OBC quota, an 8.4 per cent sub quota should be earmarked for minorities of which 6 per cent should be for Muslims.

"They (Mishra Commission) are saying either do it as 15 per cent or as share of 27 per cent. We are moving on the second option," Khurshid said, adding that this option was also recommended by the Sachar Committee, which looked into the issue of the backwardness of Muslims.

Asked whether the UPA is ruling out the first option of giving 15 per cent reservation to minorities as a while, Khurshid said, "Not ruling out the first option, we are moving on the second option."

The Minority Affairs Minister said that though his ministry is not the one to decide over the issue, he was in constant touch with the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment as they they are the ones who have to do it.

"I am obviously involved in the conceptualisation of this," he said.

Congress President Sonia Gandhi had reportedly assured a delegation of Muslim leaders in May this year that modalities for providing reservation to Muslims would be worked out in six months.

The party is learnt to be in favour of providing reservations to minorities on the lines of the quota structure that is already in place in Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu.

Tamil Nadu has 3.5 per cent reservation for Muslims within 27 per cent quota for backward castes, while Congress ruled Andhra Pradesh has given 4 per cent reservation to Muslims, which was also upheld by the Supreme Court.

Bengal to provide OBC reservation in panchayats

West Bengal Government will soon provide reservation to the people under OBC category in panchayat administration and asked the Centre to initiate steps for similar reservation in other states.


In a written statement in the state Assembly today, Panchayat and Rural Development Minister, Anisur Rahaman informed that the state government would soon amend the West Bengal Panchayat Act to grant reservation to OBC people.

He said identification of a section of OBC people in the state had already been done. The process of further identification was on by the OBC Commission and more people would be included in the list before its final announcement.


Inclusion of the OBCs in the three-tier panchayati administration was essential for the development of these people and their areas, he said.

Apart from the members of three-tier panchayati raj system, the state government would also seek reservation of OBCs for the post of chairperson in panchayat bodies.

The number of posts to be reserved for OBCs would be finalised on the basis of OBC population in the area, he said.

Welcoming Rahaman's announcement, CLP leader Manas Bhuniya told reporters outside the House that the Congress was in favour of this decision

Monday, July 5, 2010

CBI raids Bokaro Steel (SAIL) top brass

Bokaro, July 1: Unprecedented in the history of 43-year-old Bokaro Steel, CBI officers today raided the office of MD V.K Srivastav and four general managers in connection with ongoing investigations into allegations of massive irregularities in the promotion of 394 employees in December 2008.


Led by Dhanbad CBI SP V.K. Singh, more than 50 officers of the central investigating agency from Ranchi, Patna and the coal capital, were on the job since 7 am, seizing several incriminating documents along with the central computer server.

Among the GMs whose offices in the main administrative building were raided were Shankar Chowdhury (human resources), Shankar Narain (materials), and Shitansu Prasad (personnel and administration). This apart, deputy general manager (personnel) Balasubramaniam’s office was also searched. All of them were members of a promotion committee that okayed the controversial decisions.



                                 CBI SP V.K. Singh during the raid at Bokaro Steel offices on Thursday. Picture by Pankaj Singh

 Assisting the CBI officers in the seven-hour-long operation were 10 Bokaro Steel employees, all witnesses in the case, who led the sleuths to locations where the incriminating documents and files had allegedly been hidden. “We have been on the prowl since the last few months and were working overtime to catch the culprits along with proof,” said Singh. “Now, several Bokaro Steel officers will be summoned for interrogation including topshots who may have retired recently. Our work has just begun,” he added.

Simultaneous raids were also conducted today on the Delhi premises of M/S A.B.C Assessment Services, a consultant employed by the PSU to handle some of the paperwork pertaining to the promotions.

According to CBI sources, the promotions were granted to 394 employees by following a seemingly fool-proof procedure followed by a promotion committee who marked candidates on the basis of a written test and interviews.

But after the results were announced, several eligible employees suspected foul play and moved court in January 2009. They alleged that the kith and kin of several prominent politicians, including those from Bihar and Jharkhand, were favoured, while legitimate candidates were denied promotions.

Other employees, who were denied promotions, also complained to the central vigilance officer of SAIL, Bokaro Steel’s parent company. The vigilance officer, finding merit in their complaint, asked the CBI to investigate.

On June 11 this year, the CBI lodged a case under various sections of the Prevention of Corruption Act 13(1).

After today’s raids, a senior CBI officer exclaimed that a can of worms seemed to have been pried open. “Investigations may unearth more instances of corruption involving the PSU’s senior management, especially in the use of funds meant for corporate social responsibility projects, recruitments of plant attendants and issuing of advertisements worth crores to fly-by-night newspapers and tabloids.”

Courtesy: The Telegraph, Calcutta Dt : Friday , July 2 , 2010

Monday, June 14, 2010

Keep a post vacant in IAS cadre for OBC category: MP High Court

The Madhya Pradesh High Court has directed the state government and the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) to keep one post vacant in the Indian Administration Service (IAS) cadre for OBC category.
Orders in this regard were issued on Monday by a bench of Justice RC Sinha and Alok Aradhe on a petition filed by Vinita Sahu of Sagar, an OBC candidate for the post.

In her petition, Vinita sought the High Court's direction to UPSC for considering her representation on caste status before allocation of post to selected candidates.

She also said that she secured 134th rank as general candidate in Civil Services Exams conducted by the UPSC in 2009-10 while the cut-off list was 131.

Vinita further said that she comes under OBC category but she was not given benefit of it by the UPSC, saying that she comes under creamy layer.

As a result, she was considered as a General candidate and alloted an Indian Police Service (IPS) seat instead of IAS, she said.

Vinita said a notification issued by the government in 2004 has clearly mentioned that only those families will be considered as creamy layer whose income was Rs 4.50 lakh or more for three consecutive years but her father's income was Rs 4.50 lakh for only one year.

Courtesy:Press Trust Of India

              Jabalpur, June 08, 2010

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

உச்ச நீதிமன்றத் தீர்ப்பால் ஐ.ஏ.எஸ். பதவி ஒதுக்கீடு பாதிக்கும்

சென்னை, மே 8: ஐ.ஏ.எஸ்., ஐ.பி.எஸ். பதவிகளுக்கான ஒதுக்கீடு தொடர்பாக உச்ச நீதிமன்றம் அளித்துள்ள தீர்ப்பால் பிற்படுத்தப்பட்ட, ஆதி திராவிட மக்கள் பாதிக்கப்படுவர் என்பதால் முதல்வர் கருணாநிதி இதில் தலையிட்டு, இடஒதுக்கீட்டுக்கு சட்ட ரீதியான பாதுகாப்பு பெற்றுத் தர வேண்டும் என திராவிடர் கழகத் தலைவர் கி. வீரமணி கோரிக்கை விடுத்துள்ளார்.

இது தொடர்பாக அவர் சனிக்கிழமை வெளியிட்ட அறிக்கை:


உச்ச நீதிமன்ற தலைமை நீதிபதி கே.ஜி. பாலகிருஷ்ணன் தலைமையிலான எஸ்.எச். கபாடியா, பி. சுதர்சன் ரெட்டி, ஆர்.வி. ரவீந்திரன், பி. சதாசிவம் ஆகியோர் அடங்கிய அரசியல் சாசன பெஞ்ச் வெள்ளிக்கிழமை அளித்துள்ள தீர்ப்பு தாழ்த்தப்பட்ட, பிற்படுத்தப்பட்ட மாணவ, மாணவியருக்குப் பாதிப்பை ஏற்படுத்தும் வண்ணம் இருக்கிறது.

இதன்படி, பொதுப் போட்டியில் அதிக மதிப்பெண் பெற்று இடம் பிடிக்கும் பிற்படுத்தப்பட்டோர், தாழ்த்தப்பட்டோர், இடஒதுக்கீட்டுப் பிரிவுக்கு விருப்பம் தெரிவித்தால், ஏற்கெனவே இடஒதுக்கீட்டுப் பிரிவில் இடம் கிடைத்தவர்கள் வெளியேற்றப்படுவர்.

பொதுப் பிரிவில் காலியாகும் இடத்துக்கு, ஏற்கெனவே அந்தப் பிரிவில் காத்திருப்போர் பட்டியலில் உள்ளவர்கள் பொதுப் பிரிவில் இடம் பிடித்து விடுவார்கள். அவ்வாறு இடம் பிடிப்பவர்கள், இட ஒதுக்கீட்டுப் பிரிவில் உள்ளவர்களைவிட குறைவான மதிப்பெண் பெற்றவர்களாக இருப்பர்.

இதனால் இடஒதுக்கீடு வாய்ப்பு இல்லாதவர்கள் கூடுதல் இடங்களைப் பெறுவர். இட ஒதுக்கீட்டால் வாய்ப்பு கிடைத்த சிலருக்கு, வாய்ப்பு மறுக்கப்படும்.
எனவே, இதில் முதல்வர் கருணாநிதி தலையிட்டு, சட்ட ரீதியான பாதுகாப்பு நிலையை உருவாக்க முயற்சிக்க வேண்டும் என்று வீரமணி வலியுறுத்தியுள்ளார்

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Caste-based census will be more authentic: Moily

Union Law Minister M. Veerappa Moily on Wednesday said a caste-based census will help generate a more “authentic” and fresh data on backward classes in the country.


Mr. Moily, who has been favouring inclusion of castes in the census, said the exercise will be “more authentic, because after 1931 there is no caste-based data with regard to the OBCs... it is more appropriate.”

The Law Minister had a few months ago written to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh requesting him to include castes in the latest census exercise.

“There are differing views (in the Cabinet) but that does not mean divisions,” he said when asked about the lack of consensus at the Cabinet meeting yesterday on conducting caste-based census.

When pointed out that Home Minister P. Chidambaram had expressed opposition to caste-based census at the Cabinet meeting, Mr. Moily said he was not opposing but only representing the views of the Home Ministry.

Mr. Moily’s Cabinet colleague Farooq Abdullah said the discussions to explore views on caste-based census were for the next census and not the exercise currently underway.

“There is no question of division... The census has already started. So, it is not possible to do it in this census... I don’t think it is possible this time to introduce this,” Mr. Abdullah, Minister for New and Renewable Energy, told reporters outside the Parliament.

“If it had to be done for this census, this discussion should have been held earlier,” said Mr. Abdullah who had participated in the discussions on the issue in the Cabinet meeting.

Decision soon on caste-based census, Manmohan assures Lok Sabha

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Friday assured the Lok Sabha that the government would soon take a decision on the Opposition demand for a caste-based census.


“I am aware of the views of the Members of Parliament belonging to all sections. I assure you that the Cabinet will take a decision shortly,” Dr. Singh said in a brief statement.

The statement put at ease agitated Opposition members, particularly Samajwadi Party chief Mulayam Singh, Rashtriya Janata Dal supremo Lalu Prasad and Janata Dal (United) leader Sharad Yadav.

The three leaders and other Opposition members were ruffled over Home Minister P. Chidambaram's reply to the debate on census. He said there were difficulties in conducting a caste-based census and the government would keep in mind the members' views.

As soon as the Minister concluded his reply, which was punctuated by interruptions from the Opposition benches, and the House was adjourned to meet again at 2.30 p.m., the three leaders approached the Prime Minister, Congress president Sonia Gandhi and leader of the House Pranab Mukherjee. They were seen talking to them, trying to elicit some kind of an assurance on their demand. They also held a meeting with Mr. Mukherjee separately, when BJP's deputy leader Gopinath Munde was also present.

When Dr. Singh gave the assurance soon after the House reassembled, the three leaders thanked him and the Congress president for trying to resolve the matter in an amicable manner.

“A valuable guide”

Earlier, while taking note of the discussion over the last two days that witnessed arguments and reasons for canvassing the question of caste, Mr. Chidambaram said the government was seized of the matter. “The views of honourable members will certainly be a valuable guide to the government,” he said in his statement, which virtually gave out nothing but offered explanation relating to the Census 2011 and preparation of the National Population Register (NPR), the two exercises which are on. The debate on the issue saw members cutting across party lines favouring a caste-based census.

Replying to the debate, the Home Minister stressed that the main aim of the exercise was headcount and listed difficulties in including caste in the list. The Registrar-General had pointed out a number of logistics and practical difficulties in canvassing the question of caste while conducting census. However, he assured the House that the government “will give due weight to all aspects of the issue.”

“The enumerator is not an investigator or verifier,” Mr. Chidambaram said, pointing out that 21 lakh enumerators — mostly primary school teachers — had no training or expertise to classify the answer as OBC or otherwise.

“There is a Central list of OBCs and State-specific lists of OBCs. Some States do not have a list of OBCs while some have a list of OBCs and a sub-set called Most Backward Castes,” he said.

Many issues

Quoting the Registrar-General, Mr. Chidambaram said issues regarding methodology, avoiding phonetic and spelling errors, stage of canvassing of caste, maintaining integrity of enumeration and doing an accurate headcount of population would arise.

“The census is done under the authority of the Census Act, 1948. Census 2011 will be the 15th national census since 1872 and the 7th since Independence. Population census is the total process of collecting demographic, economic and social data. What is published as the census data are only aggregates; the information relating to the individual is confidential and not shared with anyone or any authority,” he said.

While throwing up the question if the census was the vehicle to carry out caste-based enumeration, he pointed out that records showed that an attempt was made by the Ministry of Social Justice to include caste as one of the questions that should be canvassed in the 2001 Census. “However, the government of the day — the NDA government — did not take a decision to that effect and maintained the policy that has been in force since 1951,” Mr. Chidambaram said.

Merit candidates can migrate to reserved category in civil services: court

The Supreme Court on Friday held that candidates in the ‘Meritorious Reserved Category' (MRC) selected on merit and placed in the ‘general/unreserved category' in the Central Civil Services Examination could be given a choice to opt for a service of higher preference in terms of Rule 16 (2) of the CSE Rules.


This rule says: “While making service allocation, candidates belonging to SC/ST or OBCs recommended against unreserved candidates may be adjusted against reserved vacancies by the government if by this process they get a service of higher choice in the order of their preference.”

A Constitution Bench of Chief Justice K.G. Balakrishnan and Justices S.H. Kapadia, R.V. Raveendran, B. Sudershan Reddy and P. Sathasivam said: “The reserved candidates belonging to the OBC/SC/ST categories who are selected on merit and placed in the list of general/unreserved category can choose to migrate to the respective reserved category at the time of allocation of services. Such migration as envisaged under Rule 16 (2) is not inconsistent with Rule 16 (1) or Articles 14, 16 (4) and 335 of the Constitution.”

The Centre appealed against a Madras High Court judgment holding ultra vires and unconstitutional Rule 16 (2) and directing it to rework service allocation dehors Rule 16 (2). Certain writ petitions were also filed. The Supreme Court stayed the judgment and referred the matter to a larger Bench.

Now, the CJI, writing the judgment, said: “MRC candidates who avail themselves of the benefit of Rule 16 (2) and are adjusted in the reserved category should be counted as part of the reserved pool for the purpose of computing the aggregate reservation quotas. The seats vacated by MRC candidates in the general pool will be offered to general category candidates.”

Two classes

The Bench said: “By operation of Rule 16 (2), the reserved status of an MRC candidate is protected so that his/her better performance does not deny him/her the chance to be allotted to a more preferred service. The amended Rule 16 (2) only seeks to recognise the inter se merit between two classes — (a) meritorious reserved category candidates and (b) relatively low ranked reserved category candidates — for the purpose of allocation to the various Civil Services with due regard for the preferences indicated by them.”

The Bench said: “When MRC candidates are put in the general list on their own merit they do not automatically relinquish their reserved status. By operation of Rule 16 (2) the reserved status of an MRC candidate is protected so that his/her better performance does not deny such candidate the chance to be allotted to a more preferred service.”

Procedural change in census questionnaire mooted

With a view to ensuring caste-based enumeration, the Tamil Nadu Backward Classes Commission has suggested a procedural change in filling up the questionnaire prepared for the Census of 2011–Household Schedule.


In his opinion submitted to the State government on April 20 [which was released to the media on Saturday], Chairman of the Commission Justice M.S. Janarthanam stated that “for the systematic enumeration of castes, there is no need at all to amend or alter or add anything new to the questionnaire.” What was required to be done was to furnish the name of the caste in respect of “Others,” namely, Other Backward Classes, in the answer to question nos. 7 (i) and 7 (ii) under the column no. 8 and 9 of the questionnaire. [The questionnaire has a provision for enumerating Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes].

If this was done, the systematic enumeration of castes of “Others”, viz., OBCs and SC/STs would be complete and effective.

The Commission called for providing adequate training to enumerators in this regard. This could be done without any involvement of special or extra expenditure.

The indicators of other criteria for the determination of socially and educationally backward classes of citizens, such as castes/classes regarded as socially backward, those mainly depending on manual labour for livelihood and those having student dropout in the age group of 7 to 15 years could be ascertained from the data available with the Statistics department of the respective States.

Mr. Justice Janarthanam said caste enumeration, carried out as suggested by him, would be authentic and it would enable the government to determine the question of a particular community or caste falling within the ambit of BC or MBC (Most Backward Classes) or otherwise, satisfying the members of such castes or communities demanding reconsideration of their status – BC, MBC or otherwise.

He urged the State government to seek the concurrence of the Union government for the proposed procedural changes which, in his opinion, may not pose any problem. He recalled the Commission's recommendation given in May 2007 to the State government, calling for a survey on socio-economic and educational conditions of the people.

The State government, in its press release, mentioned that it was making public the opinion of the Commission Chairman as this would be of use to the public and political parties under the present circumstances.

OBC census: SC seeks govt response

A PIL in the Supreme Court on Monday made a strong pitch for utilising the elaborate ‘Census 2011’ mechanism to end the 80 long years of speculation about the exact population of other backward classes (OBC), which had been the basis for 27% reservation in jobs and educational institutions.

PIL petitioner Kishore Govind Kanhere through counsel D K Garg said that while the Mandal Commission estimated that OBCs constituted 52% of the total population, the National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO) in its 61st round of survey (2004-05) had pegged it at 41% in its report on employment and unemployment situation amongst various social groups in India.

Arguing before a Bench comprising Chief Justice K G Balakrishnan and Justices Deepak Verma and B S Chauhan, the counsel said if the census took steps to identify the numbers of SCs and STs, why should the OBCs be left out of the purview of exact enumeration of their numbers.

When the Bench looked up to Solicitor General Gopal Subramaniam for a response, the law officer immediately assured the court that there was no need for the Bench to issue notice to the Centre and that he would get the response of the government on this issue within three weeks. The PIL said that the last caste-based census was held in the year 1931, wherein the OBCs were covered and complained that despite a large number of representations to the home ministry for inclusion of OBCs in Census 2011, there had been no positive response.

It said the social justice and empowerment ministry had conceded that it had been fixing targets under various scheme for upliftment of OBC population without having the data about their numbers. Even this ministry had written to the census authorities for finding out the exact number of OBC population, but the request had been turned down, the petitioner said.

The PIL referred to the law relating to 27% reservation for OBCs in central educational institutions and the subsequent challenge to its constitutional validity in the Supreme Court.

“In order to provide reservations for backward classes among citizens in public educational institutions and for providing equal opportunity in public employment, it is necessary that census should cover OBCs as envisaged under Article 340 of the Constitution,” the petitioner said.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Free Pre-recruitment Coaching Classes conducted

Our Association conducted free pre-recruitment coaching classes for Operator-cum-Technician Trainees & Assistant-cum - Technician Trainees in Salem Steel Plant from 26-03-2010 to 31-03-2010 in SVMMHS School,Mohan Nagar,Salem-636 030.

Number of Candidates participated-366

1. ITI(Fitter/Machinist)-158
2. ITI(Electrician)          - 96
3. DME                             - 57
4. DEEE                           - 55

The response was overwhelming.

SSP OBC Wishes to thank all faculty members,students,Organisers & Management of SSP for the active help.

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Free Coaching Classes for Pre-recruitment by SSP OBC

SP OBC Employees Welfare Association (SSP OBC)


Conducts Free Coaching Classes for applicants of

Operator –cum-Technician Trainee & Attendant–cum-Technician Trainees recruitment
 in
Salem Steel Plant,Salem-636 013


Employment Notification: 1/2010

Date of Examination: 04-04-2010

Venue & Date: SVMHSS School, Mohan Nagar,

26-03-2010 to 31-03-2010

Time: 5.45 PM to 8.00 PM

Candidates are requested to register their names on or before 25-03-2010



Coordinators

 ITI Electrician & Diploma EEE,ECE Mr. K.Vaideeswaran

Mr. K Vaideeswaran-98947 09496

Mr. R.Shabeer-95975 96101

 ITI Fitter, Machinist & Diploma Mech, Prodn., Met.

Mr. K Raja-94880 30892

Mr. P.Subramani-98653 13114

Mr. R Kumar-99943 94564


*Registration can also be done through Email: obc_ssp@yahoo.in



                                                                    ALL THE BEST!

                                                                                                                                  SSP OBC

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Why OBC Reservation is a must?

Human Resource Development Minister Arjun Singh declared government's intention to fix a quota for the Other Backward Castes (OBCs) in the premier government educational institutions like the Indian Institute of Technologies (IITs) and Indian Institute of Managements and other institutions of higher learning. While one know very well the intentions of Arjun Singh and his Congress Party, which was in the forefront of anti-Mandal agitation in 1990, it is important to analyse the nature of protest and fury of the upper castes in India. Why the same upper castes who burnt themselves today keep silent. Whether Arjun Singh and his party is just working on tokenism and refuses to learn lesson that the cry from the Dalit and backward today is political power which has not yet been over despite the fact that they had chief ministers and ministers. The administration remains strongly in the hands of the upper castes.




A Revisit to events in 1990 : A hero became villian



On August 7th, 1990 when Prime Minister Vishwanath Pratap Singh announced that his National Front government was going to implement the Mandal Commission Recommendations in Education and jobs, there was not much fury in the beginning. Slowly, a slanderous media campaign was launched particularly to attract circulation. A middle class newspaper like Indian Express and its loud mouth Editor Arun Shourie became mouthpieces of the upper caste contempt to the Dalits and backwards. Shourie, worked not as an ethical journalist but as a hired lawyer who has to defend his case. Upper caste students and their parents went on rampage in North India. Suicide were committed by the innocent students as young as 8 years of age who might not have known what Mandal was and what was the meaning of reservation for the downtrodden. Clearly, two big brahmanical parties of the country, the Congress and the Bharatiya Janata Party used this opportunity to target the government.



Lal Krishna Adavani decided to go on a Rathyatra to unite the Hindu society, which was 'divided' by V.P.Singh and his actions. There was a wave of anti Muslim sentiments in the middle classes. Advani became hero who revived the Hindu society and VP Singh became 'dushman number one' of the upper castes in India. Yes, the prime minister of the popular votes of India became the target number one because of reservations. All his merits became non functional once he ordered the implementation of the Mandal recommendations.



Commentators after commentators condoned the Hindutva and their thugs, their misdeeds and anti national act of spreading hatred and violence but none of them could ever muster the courage to support a prime minister who dared to go ahead against all odds. Yes, one may not agree with VP Singh and his style of politics but one need to see his track record as an efficient minister and an honest Member of Parliament. It was for the first time in history of India that a government fell because it defended a shrine and committed its constitutional duties. Yes, Ayodhya's October 1990 events led to fall of V P Singh government. It is not for nothing that he decided to stay away from the parliamentary politics, disown prime ministership and is persistently being seen with the growing mass struggles in India when the so-called mainstream politicians are busy with their castes, religious sentiments. How many of them come and support Narmada or the cuase of dying farmers. When the slums were being dislocated none of the politicians dared to come out and challenge the court. But these things do not matter for the journalists who have decided that they have to oppose anything, which brings social justice.



V.P.Singh is nowhere in mainstream politics but his Mandalisation process has spread all over. That is the great achievement because the composition of our parliament has changed. Dalits and backward communities are asking for their share in power. The political parties have to listen to them and come to the reality. Today, thanks to Mandalisation process among the Muslims, the one time social justice hero Laloo has to go.



Conspicuous Silence



15 years later when Arjun Singh informs the journalists about the reservation policy, there is not much war by the upper castes though there is resentment by the 'meritorious' industrial houses who run on a monarchical basis. Again, the same talks of merit being affected and non-availability of the students from the backward and Dalit communities. It is amusing how people change their stand. Industrialists like Rahul Bazaz, known for the shameless Hindutva lineage, remarked that reservation in the private sector would damage the credibility of big companies in India. The Bazazs should tell the world why most of the business works in India is done by the Bania community. North East South West, it is the Marwadis and Banias who have captured the major institutions with Brahmin their Gurus. The opponents of reservation should also inform why the scavenging work is fixed for the Valmiki community in India. Why is this 'Intellectual property Right' over certain work while ignoring others. Social scientists should also explain why no other community person is seen as doing scavenging work or carrying night soil over head. This meritorious upper caste would then hang their head in shame.



What is happening is most astonishing and show double standard. In 1990, the Dalits were in the forefront of supporting the Mandal Commission Recommendations meant for the backward communities. Today, a number of 'Dalit' intellectuals, who would like to parade Dalit capitalists in Delhi, are asking for a creamy lawyer theory to implement the Mandal Commission Report. An example is being given here of the lone dissenter why should the dissenter argument be taken into account. Mandal gave a report and government accepted it in toto. A person like S.S. Gill who was member secretary of the Mandal Commission today condemns VP Singh for implementing it with political motivation. It is amusing when commentators write of political motivation. Why should not any work done with political motivation? Did not the backward communities voted for the government? It is also important to analyse as why some of the Dalit intellectuals are crying for fixing quota for the Most Backward Communities (MBCs).



Arun Shourie, who spearheaded anti Mandal agitation through his reckless writings and was later rewarded by the Sangh Parivar for persistently abusing the minorities through his newspaper columns, would never had imagined that Mandal would eat his own party. He might never have foreseen the growing assertion among all communities after it. Why was India burning in 1990 and quiet in 2006.



To be sure, in 1990, the people realized that the government that time was determined to give the Dalits and backward their due share in power. One need not to remind that Ministers like Ram Vilas Paswan and Sharad Yadav had become very powerful proponents of the Mandal Mantra. The government did not stay there only. It was bringing a bill in parliament for labour reform particularly related to labours participation in Management, bill on electoral reform under Dinesh Goswami, autonomy to Prasar Bharati apart from putting Dr Ambedkar's statue in Parliament and honoring him with Bharat Ratna. Every of these acts had loud messages. It is this time that the Buddhists converts got right in job reservations. Mandal in 1990 changed the politics of the country. It gave an unprecedented and lethal weapon for the Dalit backward and Adivasis to come together. Every party had to understand the power of Mandal. Over the years, despite talks of globalisation and Hindutva, Mandalisation process continued. In the process, the upper caste leadership of the Hindutva gangs have to play second fiddle. Right from Uma Bharati to Kalyan Singh and Narendra Modi, caste his forced the Sindhi Lal Krishna Advani to ponder over his own future and he is again on another Yatra, knowing fully well, that he has lost his caste battle. The upper castes are silent and protesting just in front of the cameras. A few papers that do not sale much are again trying to instigate people to protest but those who get everything at home cannot protest. Secondly, they know they have their own government and their opposition. A government which just pretend to work for the Dalits and backward and has no real intention to do so. Most of the people know that in Manmohan Singh's safe hand their interest are safe and would be looked after. After-all, Arjun Singh's own track record for social justice is laughable and his politicization of Ministry of HRD is well known. The tricks of anti Hindutva do not work all the time in the same way as the anti Muslim card of Advani failed miserably.



Why Opposition to reservation for backward communities?



One needs to understand the psychology of opposition to Mandal. Reservation for Dalits was never implemented properly before 1990. Every time it was informed that due to lack of non availability of the candidates, seats remained vacant and quota was filled by the upper caste particularly those close to the people in power or with big bags. The 1990s changed that the backlog has to be filled with the candidates from the same community. Therefore 1990 is a watershed in the history of India and implementing the Mandal Commission Report VP Singh might have become the most hated politician of the country despite his impeccable credentials, yet, the politics of India has changed.



15 years later when Narsimha Rao crookedly with the help of the Hindutva brigade tried to undo what the Mandal had done. He went overboard to implement the privatization process and added fire to the Hindutva. Therefore, both the demolition of Babari Masjid and growing privatization were part of the Narsimha Rao era which some of our pen pushers termed as glorious. One need not to inform the readers here how Narsimha Rao died. Not a single tear was shed for him.



When the jobs are nowhere and everything is gone private, then why are the upper castes angry at reservation for backward communities? The fact is that seats for Dalits were rarely fulfilled and we had seen huge backlog. There has been no protest. It was easier to curtail the protest of the Dalits because of their numbers and social background. Now, the reservation for backward communities being a reality, the powerful backward communities will hit and break the bone of the upper castes. That is the fear of these. They know that there are enough students from these communities who will join the great institutions of technology and managements.



Today, these pen pushers pretend that reservation should only for the Dalits. Similarly, Dalit opportunists also dance to the tone of their brahmanical masters when they condemn reservation for the backward communities. It is a fact that many of the backward communities should not have been there in the list. But that is not a way to justify that there should not be reservation.



Discrimination despite merit



It is completely lie to say that Dalit and backwards are not doing business today or they lack ability. To say that there is no discrimination in India on the basis of caste is again a great lie which only insensitive caste Hindus can tell the whole world. Four years back I investigated a case of a very bright Dalit student Jyoti Prakash Vishwas who passed out from R.K.Mission School in Kolkata and was working as an engineer in a central government public sector company. His Bengali bosses used filthy language against him and suspended him on various charges, which were found absolutely untrue by a team of human rights activists including me. Vishwas was not allowed to join a well paid job in a reputed private company. His wife who was working with Government of West Bengal was not given medical compensation as per company's rule. After our fact-finding report came out, the management tried to strike a cordial note. Vishwas who by then had never knew what exactly was Dalit movement and discrimination realized what is the identity of a bright Dalit scholar. Two Years, when he left Delhi, Vishwas one day send me a mail from Saudi Arabia where he was working as an Engineer. He wrote: "Sir, I thank you for standing with me in my struggle against injustice. I know Dalits would not be able to get justice as long as they are part of Hindu system. I have decided to embrace Islam, a faith which give me strength and inner peace."



Those votaries of 'merit' should understand clearly well that things are not as easy as they think. A few days back when I was in Chhatishgarh and a Dalit student from National Law University Raipur came to me and informed me about the harassment he faced in the University. Despite the fact that he was the only candidate in his course of M.Phil/Ph.D/LLM, it took 3 years for the board of the college to accept his M.Phil and then deny him right for Ph.D. Yes, I talk about Abhishek Priya Anand, a student who completed his M.Sc from Hyderabad and qualified and ranked 8 th in the merit in the National Law college entrance test, today face a caste prejudiced Vice chancellor and his bureaucracy.



Will the Indian merit mongers ever think why they want to shut every door for the Dalits and backward communities? If Dalit converts to other faith, the Hindutva brigade is up in arm against it. There is no reform movement with in Hindu dharma where they can get justice. The jobs, which were reserved for them, have been privatized. Educational institutions rarely fulfill their quota. So demeaning are the upper castes that they are ready to get forged certificate of Dalit quota to get admitted in the University. In Delhi, a prominent doctor of a famous medical college got his MBBS degree on passing an entrance test under the SC quota. He produced a false certificate of adoption by a Dalit father. The fact was that his father's servant happened to be a Dalit. This upper caste doctor used his leverages and asked his servant to 'adopt' him to get admit. A Similar case of admission has been found in Lucknow by a Brahmin girl.



Creamy lawyer theory is dangerous at the moment



Unfortunately, some of the Dalit intellectuals have also jumped in to condemn the quota for the Dalits. These commentators are talking in terms of creamy lawyer theory. Question is let the government first implement the reservation only then creamy lawyer theory could be implemented. If the creamy lawyer theory could be implemented in the Mandal, then the same should be true for the Dalits also. And the same should be true for the upper castes also in the general seats. It is a dangerous preposition. It is a fact that the power elite of a community are the first to get the benefits of education and quota. Did not the Brahmin got it from the upper castes initially? There are so many of them but many of them have little representation in power structure. Same is true about Dalits and backward communities.



Of course, the politics of quota is dangerous. Arjun Singh's intention has been like that of his party. I am sure he know it well that Dalit and backwards are thoroughly politicized and are not going to be just 'vote bank' of any party. They are today running with confidence and asking for a share in power. While the political parties may not have implemented the reservation fully, the Most Backward Communities in Uttar-Pradesh have learnt a lesson from Bihar. The MBCs have already revolted against the political elites of the state and asking for their fair representation in power. Today, power is the real need of the people.



As far as jobs are concern, let the government bring a white paper on reservations and give us ideas as how long will it take it to complete its backlog. When can we see 17.5% IAS officers from Dalits, 27.5% from backward communities and 7.5% from tribal? Once the government fulfill its promise we can think of new ideas to give representation to MBCs and oppressed Dalits particularly women from these sections of society.



Reforms mean debrahmanising India



In a welfare state, the government cannot shy away from implementing reforms. Where are government reform for land, forest and water? If reform mean giving precious national assets to a few cronies of the power elites then the government has to be ready to face protest of various forms. Reform means that the government demolish its brahmanical structure. Reform truly mean debrahmanisation process of India. It means India's corrupt caste structured village structure is hit from below the belt. For that a strong land reform measures need to be carried out. Our corrupt and caste-iests Industrial magnets are not ready for the same therefore face resistance from the people. Reform means that the upper castes should learn that time for hegemony has gone and it is time they learn to live together and respect diversity of India. Reservation are going to stay as long as government does not reform itself and Hindu system remain caged in the age old myopic vision of division of work based on caste. Let us truly reform our society and work for a truly democratic India where every community participates in power and every person go to school irrespective of caste and creed.

Southern record

ENKITESH RAMAKRISHNAN, T.S. SUBRAMANIAN,

K. VENKATESWARALU, RAVI SHARMA & DIONNE BUNSHA

South India has an enviable history of reservation in education.

THE controversy over the proposed Bill to introduce reservation for Other Backward Classes (OBC) in educational institutions has been characterised by a number of arguments against he proposal.

Broadly, they have been that "reservation militates against merit and excellence” and that it harms "the interests of other communities, especially the economically weaker sections among the upper castes". There is also the fervent contention that the system of reservations does not actually help the weaker sections among the OBCs and the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (S.C. and S.T.)



Since the benefits are cornered by the affluent among them. The sum total of the arguments is that reservations in institutions of higher, professional education such as the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) and the Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) would be nothing short of a sociological disaster.



Ironically, this line of reasoning has been most vehemently advanced from regions that have no real or concrete exposure to reservation in the education sector. This includes the majority of North Indian States. In contrast, in the four South Indian States as well as in Maharashtra and Gujarat, which have had varying degrees of experience in this regard, the opposition is marginal or absolutely nil. The overwhelming opinion among people in these States, and even in "excellence-pursuing" academic circles, supports the principle and practice of reservation. More important, the system seems to have got so embedded in the education sector in almost all these States that the reaction is notably balanced.



All these States have had to go through periods of turbulence on this question before acquiring the balance. Social activists and vast sections of the academia in these States, therefore, refute the arguments put forward to oppose reservation. A quick appraisal conducted by Frontline correspondents in these States, in the wake of the recent controversy, reiterated this.



The concept of reservation in education for historically oppressed sections of society took

roots in South India over a century ago, along wit h the freedom movement. That a number of initiatives associated with the freedom struggle in this region had their lineage in the social reform movement against caste discrimination. According to B.R.P. Bhaskar, a veteran journalist and social analyst, this social reform lineage is a significant factor that differentiates between regions and societies that understand and support the concept of reservation for social justice and oppose it.



This concept was first advanced by Tamil Nadu, where the social and political assertion of OBCs and other deprived sections led to the creation of the powerful Dravidian movement. Reservation in education and public service began in the Madras Presidency (much of it is now in Tamil Nadu) as early as 1831. The British Raj initiated this in response to petitions from various public groups. Over the next few decades the provisions of reservation were progressively redefined and modified, correcting anomalies and rationalising affirmative action.



The process continued after Independence too and successive governments under the leadership of Dravidian parties such as the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) and the

All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) introduced "rationalising" classifications like "economic scale" and Most Backward Castes (MBCs). The sum total of these measures was that reservation in the educational institutions in Tamil Nadu rose to 69 per cent, a figure commensurate with the total population of S.C.s, S.T.s, OBCs and MBCs in the State.



Tamil Nadu had 69 per cent reservation even before the Mandal Commission recommendations, promoting 27 per cent reservation for OBCs, were introduced at the national level. In this context, the Supreme Court came up with a stipulation seeking to limit reservation in educational institutions to 50 per cent. This order was a result of efforts by a number of anti-reservation organisations and individuals trying to bring down the reservation quota in Tamil Nadu. But the cumulative initiatives taken by various governments led by the Dravidian parties successfully resisted these counter-moves. The net result of all this is that since 1994, Tamil Nadu's 69 per cent reservation has the sanction of being part of the Ninth Schedule of the Constitution and hence is beyond judicial scrutiny. Equally important, the reservation system has the near-total support of the entire political spectrum of the State, barring a few fundamentalist Hindutva organisations.



The Tamil Nadu experience is reflected in the quota system in Karnataka and Kerala. Both these States had initiated reservations in the education sector for OBCs in the late 19th century or early 20th century, with periodic revisions and modifications.

Reservation in education was initiated by the princely states of Travancore, Kochi and Mysore under the British Raj with widespread popular support. The tradition, naturally, helped imbibe schemes such as Mandal Commission recommendations as positive measures to advance social justice. According to Professor Ravivarma Kumar, former Chairman of the Karnataka State Commission for Backward Classes (KSCBC), "children in Karnataka are taught from the very beginning that reservation is very much part of the social justice system, so they learn to live with it".

In Andhra Pradesh as also in Maharashtra and Gujarat, the process started relatively late.

In Andhra Pradesh, it was initiated in the 1970s while in Gujarat and Maharashtra, the schemes were formalised in the 1980s and 1990s.



At present, Karnataka has 50 per cent reservation - 32 per cent for OBCs and 18 per cent for S.C.s and S.T.s - in all institutes of higher learning. According to Ravivarma Kumar, from 1992 to 2002, over 25,000 OBC students were able to gain admission to professional colleges in Karnataka thanks to this. Kerala has approximately 50 per cent reservation for its OBC, S.C. and S.T. populations, while Andhra Pradesh has 49.5 per cent reservation.



A number of "well-known experiences" over the past few decades in these States challenge the contentions against reservation. The life and career of former Karnataka Chief Minister and Congress leader M. Veerappa Moily is evidence of how reservation helped a family from a socially marginalised community come up the ladder of society. Moily maintains that but for reservation he would not have come up in life. He recounted to Frontline how, during the first two years of his undergraduate course, he lagged behind and after that became the class topper. "We have to have an inclusive society. The IIMs can't become islands for the privileged. If this quota system is crude, let educationalists re-engineer and restructure it," he commented.



Well-known writer and social analyst Professor Kancha Ilaiah, who is a faculty member of the Political Science Department of Osmania University, and T. Devender Goud, former Andhra Pradesh Home Minister and a senior leader of the Telugu Desam Party, support Moily's views. Prof. Ilaiah said that but for reservation, OBC members would have been living in the medieval age. Goud pointed out: "It is because of reservation people like me could make a mark." The TDP leader added that in all the four south Indian States, various OBC communities have registered a steady rise in education and social status.

Commenting on the merit versus reservation debate,

Dr. M. Anandakrishnan, Chairman, Madras Institute of Development Studies (MIDS), pointed out that the assumption that reservation per se would lead to an erosion of excellence and quality was based on insufficient evidence. Anandakrishnan, who is a former Vice-Chancellor of Anna University, Chennai, said it was erroneous to argue that those who came under reservation were generally incompetent and could not cope with the level of performance expected in the IITs and the IIMs. He added that the reservation issue had been dealt with as an emotional one and was being unnecessarily politicised. "Reservation existed in many well-known universities in India, including those in Tamil Nadu such as Anna, Bharathidasan and Tiruchi universities and Osmania and Andhra universities in Andhra Pradesh. Yet the quality or prestige of these universities has not been vitiated," he said.



Anandakrishnan argued that it would be a fallacy to imagine that OBC communities cannot throw up sufficient number of bright students to fill up their quotas in institutions of higher education. He said: "Assuming that 5,000 students were to be admitted to the IITs every year and 27 per cent reservation was made for students belonging to OBCs, it would work out to 1,350 seats for the OBCs. The number of IIT aspirants from the OBC communities is about one lakh. You cannot say that out of this 1,00,000, there will not be 1,350 candidates competent enough to get into the IITs." The academician also pointed out that there is not much difference in the failure rates between the open category and the reserved category of students. "In fact, my experience as the Vice-Chancellor of Anna University showed that those who come under the reserved category tend to put an extra effort to perform better because they think that this is a rare opportunity for their upward social mobility and economic security," Anandakrishnan emphasised.



The MIDS Chairman is of the view that the urge to preserve brand-named educational institutions as ivory towers on the argument that their quality would be diluted by reservation is similar to the historical social anomaly that sought to ban temple entry for lower castes on the argument that temples would be desecrated if they were thrown open to them. No temple was desecrated after it was thrown open to them, he remarked.



Professor Anil K. Gupta, Chair Professor of Entrepreneurship, IIM-Ahmedabad, is of the view that the construct of merit in many of the merit versus intellect debates is in terms of proficiency in the English langua ge. "This is an absolutely gratuitous term of reference, which fails to understand real merit," he said. Gupta added that in the context of this debate, one needs to take into consideration the fact that 60 to 70 per cent of those who win National Innovation Foundation Awards are school dropouts.



Prof. Ilaiah perceived the Merit versus Reservation argument as a kind of conspiracy by certain sections of the upper castes to make institutions such as the IITs and the IIMs the exclusive preserve of the English-knowing social elites. He also pointed out that, at the socio-political level, the South Indian States are credited with democracy that is more functional and economies that are better performing, despite the high level of reservation.

"In a way, it is all because of reservation. After all, if the economy does well, whom do you sell your products to? It has to be to Dalits, OBCs and minorities. Only after the blacks were given equal opportunities did the American economy witness a boom. You have to make the deprived sections share power and become partners in progress," Prof. Illaiah said.

There is also nuanced criticism of some aspects of the system.



According to Prof. G.K. Karanth, head of the Bangalore-based Centre for Study of Social Change and Development of the Institute for Social and Economic Change, there is no point in making available higher education without creating the path to get there: "The State governments by insisting that the medium of instruction should be in the mother tongue, confines the students to a local world. Later they are not able to communicate. They might have a degree but no employment." Karanth is of the view that reservation is benefiting only a few OBCs, especially the urban rich, the urban-educated and second-generation beneficiaries: "With people devising so many ways to earn money, the sense of social deprivation is not proportionate to the economic deprivation. We have been able to deny Public Distribution System benefits to those above the poverty line, but we have not been able to devise a foolproof method to remove creamy layer OBCs from the reservation list."



Professor Gupta emphasised the need to have compulsory universal primary education if measures such as reservation in institutions of higher education have to go beyond window-dressing. According to Achyut Yagnik, social activist and writer, there are many nomadic tribes, denotified tribes and even religious minorities in Gujarat who have problems in gaining access to even primary education. "There are 20 Muslim communities on the OBC list in Gujarat but they find it difficult to get even certificates from the bureaucracy," he pointed out.



Dr. P. Radhakrishnan, a Professor at the MIDS, is apprehensive that the relevance of the constitutional provisions on vital public issues such as reservation is in danger because of judicial delays and the tendency of politicians to manipulate constitutional provisions in some way or the other.

In spite of these concerns, the overall social atmosphere in States exposed to reservation is one of support. As B.R.P. Bhaskar points out, a number of historical, social and political factors have contributed to the general support in these States and the frenzied opposition in some other parts of the country.



"The social reform movement and the demands for reservation in these areas, especially in the southern States, had come up along with a general reform movement and the national liberation movement in the late 19th century and the early 20th century. It was a period of democratic aspirations and social churning, and one could see reform movements of all communities helping one another. The leaders of the Brahmin reform movement supported those who advocated reforms among OBCs, and both joined hands to lend a voice of solidarity to those who led a reform movement in the Muslim community," Bhaskar said.



Unfortunately, that climate no longer exists, particularly in those areas where movements against caste discrimination and oppression did not develop along with the general reform movement, he lamented. In fact, he added, at present we do not seem to have the socio-economic conditions to discuss the reservation issue objectively owing to widespread unemployment. He noted: "The competition for jobs is intense and many think that reservation divests their opportunities, little realizing the negative impact of historical social subjugation and oppression of the disadvantaged sections and the need to rectify such negative impact."



Courtesy:http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/stories/20060505006400800.htm