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Opposition in a quandary over quota
By Our Staff Correspondent
PATNA, MAY 31. The Opposition finds itself in the soup not
knowing how to react, having been cornered by the ruling RJD-led
combine over the new restructured reservation regime enforced in
the State.
The RJD supremo, Mr. Laloo Prasad Yadav, has so engineered his
reservation framework that the Opposition leaders are at a loss
in formulating a strategy to attack him without causing harm to
themselves. The Telecommunications Minister, Mr. Ram Vilas
Paswan, is the latest to join the Opposition bandwagon in a
desperate bid to make their own presence felt.
The Railway Minister and senior Samata Party leader, Mr. Nitish
Kumar, declined to fan the controversy on the ground that it
would only benefit Mr. Yadav, while the State unit of the CPI
described the exercise as ``unbalanced''. Mr. Paswan rephrased it
to accuse Mr. Yadav of being anti-Dalit.
Though he advocated that the Scheduled Castes should be given
reservation proportionate to their population, Mr. Paswan did not
consider as unjustified the increase in the quotas of the
intermediary backward castes, the extremely backward castes and
women belonging to the backward castes.
Mr. Paswan was of the opinion that the Supreme Court's ceiling on
50 per cent reservation was not binding and wanted the State
Government to draft a fresh law and provide 69 per cent
reservation as in Tamil Nadu and refer it to Parliament for
inclusion in schedule nine of the Constitution.
He demanded that the State Government revise the reservation in
jobs on the basis of the report of the recent census and not on
the basis of the report of 1991. He alleged that even the present
reallocation of 15 per cent did not match the population of the
SC which comprise 15.47 per cent of the population of the State
according to the 1991 census.
Mr. Paswan's arguments run basically on the same lines as that of
the RJD Minister, Mr. Rammai Ram, who, however, was pacified by
the RJD Chief that he would consider the demand for proportionate
reservation on the basis of the 2001 census report in about a
couple of months.
But the fact remains that the report pertaining to enumeration of
the population of the SC is likely to take some more months for
publication, going by the past experience. Hence the present
structure is likely to be in existence for some time. Mr. Paswan,
however, has not ruled out the possibility of the Lok Janshakti
Party taking the matter to the court for striking down the State
Government's order if the assurance given to Mr. Ram was
breached.
After slashing down the reservation quota for the adivasis from
10 per cent to 1 per cent in the wake of the bifurcation of the
State, the State Government redistributed the residual 9 per cent
allocating 1 per cent to SC, 3 per cent to the intermediary
backward castes, 4 per cent to the extremely backward castes and
1 per cent to women belonging to the backward castes. Following
the reapportionment, the extremely backward castes enjoy the
largest share with 18 per cent reservation, followed by the SC
with 15, the intermediary backward castes 14, women belonging to
the backward castes three and ST one.
One ostensible reason for Mr. Kumar staying away from the
controversy is that the restructuring suits him well. For one the
intermediary backward castes have benefited and, for another the
extremely backwards too have gained substantially. Mr. Kumar,
like Mr. Yadav, belongs to the intermediary backward caste.
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