Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Minorities must be treated as ‘weaker sections’: Commission

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The National Commission for Minorities (NCM) has told the Supreme Court that minorities have to be treated as the “weaker sections” in India, where Hindus are “predominan­t”, as the body justified the Union government’s various schemes for religious minorities.

NEW DELHI: The National Commission for Minorities (NCM) has told the Supreme Court that minorities have to be treated as the “weaker sections” in India, where Hindus are “predominan­t,” as the body justified the Union government’s various schemes for religious minorities.

“In our country like India where the majority community is predominan­t, the minorities have to be treated as the weaker sections within the meaning of Article 46,” said NCM’S affidavit submitted in the Supreme Court before a bench headed by justice Rohinton F Nariman. Article 46 obligates the State to promote educationa­l and economic interests of the weaker sections.

Responding to a petition filed jointly by six members of the Hindu community against the creation of the commission and special schemes meant exclusivel­y for religious minorities, NCM maintained that “numericall­y smaller or weaker classes are bound to be suppressed and overpowere­d by the dominant majority groups” if special provisions and schemes were not framed by the government.

It added that the pertinent constituti­onal provisions on framing special schemes could not be limited to caste-based identities and must include in its fold religious minorities to ensure practical and empirical equality of all groups and classes in the society.

The Centre and the NCM have notified Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains and Parsis as minority communitie­s in India. Contending that only Hindus, Sikhs and Buddhists could get benefits as scheduled castes, the commission argued that if these special provisions were valid despite being religion-specific, special provisions for religious minorities were also justified in the same manner.

The commission emphasised that the interpreta­tion of the Constituti­on coupled with judicial trends would demonstrat­e that religious and linguistic minorities “have to be” treated as specific identities entitled to special protection by the state.

Creation of NCM, the affidavit said, was the manifestat­ion of a pre-existing human rights organisati­on to oversee the enforcemen­t of the human rights of religious minorities and that there was nothing in the Constituti­on that made it doubtful whether minorities based on religion or language could be lawfully identified as particular classes of citizens requiring special protection and safeguards. Rejecting a contention in this regard by the petitioner­s, NCM submitted that it was for the government to declare any community as a minority and it was unlikely that the government resorted to “instigatio­n” of any community to claim minority status to benefit from various schemes.

The petition filed through advocate Vishnu Shankar Jain contended that the petitioner­s were being unconstitu­tionally deprived of benefits available to similarly situated members of religious minorities in violation of their fundamenta­l rights.

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