Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

50 Muslims clear exam, highest number since Independen­ce

- M Tariq Khan and Gulam Jeelani letters@hindustant­imes.com

Fifty of the 1,099 candidates who cleared the civil services examinatio­n this year were Muslims, the highest since Independen­ce.

“This is the first time so many Muslims have cleared the Union Public Service Commission examinatio­n since Independen­ce,” said Zafar Mahmood, chairman and founder of the Zakat Foundation. “It seems the community is progressin­g.”

The NGO runs a civil service coaching centre for Muslim youth in Delhi’s Jamia Nagar.

A panel headed by retired judge Rajender Sachar had noted in 2006 that Muslims enjoyed just 3% representa­tion in the civil services and 4% in the police service. About 4.5% of the students who cleared the civil service examinatio­n this year are Muslim.

About 10% of the top 100 candidates also hailed from the community. In fact, candidates from strife-ridden Jammu and Kashmir took the lead – with Bilal Mohiud Din Bhat bagging the 10th rank and 13 others emerging successful. “My feat will mean a lot to Kashmir, and inspire its youth to seek a career in civil services,” Bhat told HT. Abdul Jabbar (28) made history by becoming the first Meo Muslim to clear the civil services examinatio­n.

The number of Muslims clearing the civil services is steadily rising. While 30 candidates from the community cleared it in 2013, the number rose to 34 in 2014 and 36 in 2016. Although Muslims comprise 13.4% of India’s population, they find dismal representa­tion in top government services due to lack of educationa­l facilities and resources. “On an average, only 3% Muslims cleared the civil services examinatio­n in the last few years. This is not a very encouragin­g figure,” said Agha Pervez Masih, administra­tor of the Lucknow Guidance Centre, which provides free coaching to Muslim students.

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