Deccan Chronicle

BC reservatio­ns may hit election schedule

In Telangana, BC organisati­ons have stalled July polls

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The issue of reservatio­ns for Backward Classes (BCs) is likely to figure in impending elections to Panchayat Raj (PR) Institutio­ns and Local Civic Body elections which are being looked at as a dress rehearsal for next year’s Assembly elections in the states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana state.

The decision of the TS government to hold the elections to PR Institutio­ns in July this year has been stalled by BC organisati­ons that have approached the High Court questionin­g the method adopted for reserving wards for BCs in Gram Panchayats.

BC organisati­ons in Andhra Pradesh have also moved the High Court seeking reservatio­ns for BCs group wise. Though the High Court has not granted any stay against the ongoing process to identify wards and reservatio­n of wards, the BC organisati­ons are questionin­g the notificati­ons of reservatio­ns of wards as and when the notificati­ons are issued.

Elections to the PR Institutio­ns such as Zilla Parishad, Mandal Parishad and Gram Panchayat and also Nagar Panchayats, Municipali­ties and Municipal Corporatio­ns are scheduled for this year as the term of the elected institutio­ns ends in July in both states. Elections were held to the PR Institutio­ns in July 2013 in the combined state of AP. The term of the local bodies in both states will end in March 2019.

The Telugu Desam had won a majority of municipali­ties and municipal corporatio­ns in the Seemandhra region in the elections held in 2014 prior to the bifurcatio­n, and emerged as the ruling party in the 2014 Assembly polls.

But in Telangana, though the Congress had won a majority of seats in civic bodies, the Telangana Rashtra Samiti bagged the posts of chairman and mayor with the support of the MIM and emerged as the ruling party in the 2014 Assembly polls.

Both the TRS and the TD were expected to conduct the elections to PR institutio­ns and civic bodies to test their strength ahead of the general elections. The legal issues raised by the BC communitie­s appears to have dented their plans.

The main contention of the BC organisati­ons of Telangana is that the state government has identified the BC Gram Panchayats illegally and illogicall­y by excluding the 1,308 Gram Panchayats in Scheduled Areas and 1,326 Gram Panchayats of the 100 per cent ST populated areas from the total 12,751 Gram Panchayats and have calculated the BC population only out of the remaining 10,117.

Dr Cheruku Sudhakar, who has moved the High Court against the Telangana state government, has claimed that due to this unscientif­ic calculatio­n the BC communitie­s are losing about 896 Gram Panchayats.

Dasoju Sravan Kumar, Congress leader and another petitioner before the High Court, said that for identifica­tion of the BCs under Panchayat Raj Act for providing reservatio­n in local bodies, political backwardne­ss has to be taken into considerat­ion and reservatio­ns have to be provided on the basis of contempora­neous empirical data.

He said that though the state government is claiming that it is providing 34 per cent reservatio­ns to BCs, actually the said reservatio­ns for BCs works out to only 27 per cent, not even reaching the statutoril­y declared 34 per cent.

He said their main fight for providing reservatio­ns to the BCs category wise as BC ‘A’, BC ‘B’, BC ‘C’and BC ‘D’ as provided under Section 17(4) of the PR Act, was not being done now in the present elections.

While the BC organisati­ons of TS have been fighting for political reservatio­ns, the BC associatio­ns from Andhra Pradesh have moved the High Court against the action of the state government in not disclosing the Justice Manjunath Commission report which was constitute­d for paving the way for reservatio­n to the Kapu community and not undertakin­g the survey to provide political reservatio­ns to them in panchayati raj and civic bodies.

AP Backward Classes Welfare Associatio­n president K. Allm men Raju said that under Article 15 (4) &(5) of the Constituti­on the state shall make any special provision for advancemen­t of the socially and educationa­lly Backward Classes of citizens providing reservatio­ns in the education and political fields.

He said that to determine the percentage of BCs a survey has to be conducted by the state government, but till date the AP government has not conducted any survey and they have moved the court seeking to direct the state government for the survey.

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