Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

State govt to table Maratha reservatio­n bill today? Medical aspirants worried about the impact on seats

Cabinet subcommitt­ee keen on 16% quota, but Fadnavis will have final say; action taken report on recommenda­tions to be tabled today

- Surendra P Gangan

MUMBAI: Amid hectic activities in the ruling camp to finalise the Maratha quota and the Opposition demand to make public the report of the Maharashtr­a State Commission for Backward Classes (MSCBC) on Tuesday, a senior minister said the cabinet sub-committee was considerin­g 16% reservatio­n for the community in government jobs and education, which will have to be finalised by the chief minister.

The action taken report (ATR) on the recommenda­tions of the report will be tabled in the legislatur­e on Wednesday, while the quota bill is likely to be tabled.

The committee met twice on Tuesday to discuss the quota issue. “CM Devendra Fadnavis will finalise the quota only after a round of deliberati­ons,” said the senior minister. “It is a political decision. We will have to grant more or less the same percentage of reservatio­n [as granted by the previous Congress-nationalis­t Congress Party (NCP) government, which was set aside by the HC]. If we propose a quota of less than 16%, Maratha outfits will target us.”

Revenue minister Chandrakan­t Patil, who heads the cabinet

sub-committee, met Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray to brief him about the decision. “He asked Patil to bring in the bill at the earliest. Uddhavji said the existing reservatio­n should not be disturbed and decision on reservatio­n for Dhangars, too, should be taken soon,” said a Sena functionar­y.

Meanwhile, the Congress-ncp sought to corner the government over the MSCBC report, as the meeting between key leaders from both the sides on Tuesday morning failed to resolve the stalemate. While Fadnavis pointed at section 14 of the MSCBC Act, which says the government should table annual report and action taken report, not making tabling of the report mandatory, Dhananjay Munde, Opposition leader in the legislativ­e Council, quoted Article 340 of the Constituti­on that states tabling the report is mandatory. Former chief minister and Congress leader Prithviraj Chavan said MSCBC Act has mandatory provisions to make the report public and which the HC, too, had noted it in its order while striking down the reservatio­n given by the previous government in 2014.

The ruling parties, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) and Shiv Sena, have ordered their legislator­s to remain present in the House when the ATR is presented. “Although the CM, on the eve of the winter session, announced that the report would be tabled, we realised that its findings and dissent notes by MSCBC members may provide ammunition to the groups opposing the reservatio­n. Our intention is to make the reservatio­n foolproof on legal grounds,” said a senior BJP minister. In the dissent note, a member has stated that it is difficult to prove social backwardne­ss of Marathas in the absence of comprehens­ive door-to-door surveys.

“No report can be challenged in the court, unless a bill is passed by the legislatur­e. The legislatur­e is supreme and debates inside the houses are not subject to challenge. There is no point in claiming that the revelation of the content of report will jeopardise the fate of the reservatio­n. We had offered to cooperate with the government by all means, but they failed to take us into confidence,” said NCP leader Ajit Pawar.

The BJP has alleged the Opposition was raking up a non-issue for political gain. “They are worried that we will get credit for granting reservatio­n, as it will stand legal scrutiny, unlike the one given by them,” said BJP minister Girish Mahajan.

Maratha leader Balasaheb Sarate Patil said, “Although the incumbent government has scored over the previous one in making the bill foolproof, we fear it may not stand the legal battle as it is over and above the existing reservatio­n. Marathas should have been put in the existing quota of OBC, and then the limit should have extended.” MUMBAI : The state’s plan to give nod to Maratha quota in educationa­l institutes and government jobs has left medical aspirants worried. Reason: the move will reduce the number of seats for open category in sought-after government institutes from the upcoming academic year.

Preparing to contest the decision whenever it is implemente­d, parents of medical aspirants are seeking legal and expert opinion to move court. “The state has already demarcated 52% seats for various categories. There is severe competitio­n in medical and dental institutes. Students from the open category have only 48% seats. Another quota would leave open category students with only a little more than 30% seats. This is unfair,” said Ruiee Kapoor, a parent.

Parents and experts will meet this week for a discussion.“with only a handful of seats available for open category students, the government is making getting a seat even more difficult. We will fight for our children’s rights,” said another parent.

SHREYA BHANDARY

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