The Asian Age

Cong sees no value in giving...

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Continued from Page 1 reservatio­n plan, OBCs, who are about 40 per cent of Gujarat’s population, have 27 per cent reservatio­n. In addition to this, Scheduled Castes have seven per cent reservatio­n and Scheduled Tribes 15 per cent.

This means that Gujarat already has 49 per cent reservatio­n, one per cent less than the maximum reservatio­n the Supreme Court allows. There is no way that the Patidars would be satisfied with just one per cent.

Gujarat Pradesh Congress chief Bharat Singh Solanki has said that in its manifesto the party is likely to announce a 20 per cent reservatio­n for Economical­ly Backward Classes (EBC), but this will mean amending the Constituti­on and approachin­g the courts.

With the Congress remaining non-committal over the quota demand, Mr Patel has extended his November 3 deadline to the Congress to announce its stand on the Patel reservatio­n issue to November 7.

Mr Patel, who rode to fame over his agitation demanding quota for Patidars, is in no position to back off and would rather contest independen­tly than have any kind of seat sharing with Congress.

“He can’t go with the BJP and at the same time, he has to keep the pitch of reservatio­n up,” the Congress leader said.

Congress sources said this is the ideal situation for the party as it will benefit from the division in the votes of Gujarat’s 12 per cent Patel population which has traditiona­lly been BJP voters.

Mr Patel has been holding hectic negotiatio­ns with the Congress and was recently filmed leaving a hotel where the BJP claimed that he met Mr Gandhi. However, both Congress and Mr Patel have denied the meeting.

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