Yogi Adityanath govt mulls quota within quota for OBC sub-castes

The state government certainly wishes to provide relief to the sub-castes

The state government certainly wishes to provide relief to the sub-castes
The state government certainly wishes to provide relief to the sub-castes

Yogi govt mulls separate quota for 18 sub-castes within 27% OBC bracket

The Yogi Adityanath government is mulling a proposal to provide quota within quota to 18 OBC sub-castes whose proposed inclusion in the Scheduled Castes list has been struck down by the Allahabad High Court on the grounds of being unconstitutional. The Yogi-led government is planning reservations within the 27 percent OBC quota bracket for these sub-castes.

Though the final contours of the proposal are yet to be decided, sources said that the proposal will have to be taken up in the state cabinet besides getting it passed in both houses of the Uttar Pradesh Assembly as a Bill before sending it to the Centre for its final approval.

The 18 sub-castes in question include Majhwar, Kahar, Kashyap, Kevat, Mallah, Nishad, Kumhar, Prajapati, Dheevar, Bind, Bhar, Rajbhar, Dhiman, Batham, Turha, Godia, Manjhi, and Machhua.

“The state government certainly wishes to provide relief to these sub-castes,” a senior minister said.

The sub-castes like Kevat, Mallah, Bind, Nishad, and Manjhi broadly come under the Nishad community, which, as a matter of fact, has been demanding an SC status for quite some time.

He said that as far as inclusion of the said OBC sub-castes in the SC list was concerned, it will have to be done under Article 341 of the Indian Constitution.

Sources in the government said that the ruling BJP did not seek to disturb the SC list while provisioning statutory sanctity to the 18 OBC sub-castes, who are unable to get reservation benefits because of their poor socio-economic conditions.

In 2018, the state government constituted a four-member committee under the chairmanship of retired judge Raghavendra Kumar to report on the economic, social, and educational studies of the backward classes and their participation in jobs.

The committee has recommended the division of 27 percent reservation for backward classes into three parts. It had recommended 7 percent reservation for the backward, 11 percent for the more backward, and 9 percent for the most backward.

OBCs collectively form the largest voting bloc in Uttar Pradesh and constitute about 45 percent of the total population. However, the more powerful backward classes — Yadavs, Patels, and Jats — have been alleged to corner a bulk of the jobs/ admissions to state institutions.

In 2001, when Rajnath Singh was the chief minister of the state, a committee headed by Hukum Singh had recommended sub-categorization of OBCs, allocating only 5 percent reservation to Yadavs and 14 percent to MBCs. This was stayed by the state high court.

[With Inputs from IANS]

PGurus is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with all the latest news and views

For all the latest updates, download PGurus App.

2 COMMENTS

  1. Time to remove entire quota system. Only economic weaker sections to get some concessions i.e. monetary benefits than any promotions beyond some point. Only merit should be criteria from mid-level Managers & above

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here