Oman Daily Observer

Massive Maratha march takes Mumbai by storm

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MUMBAI: Mumbai was on Wednesday deluged by a mammoth ‘Maratha storm’ with lakhs of people from the politicall­y powerful community began their first, biggest and final mammoth ‘ mook morcha’ (silent procession), leading to the Maharashtr­a government announcing a slew of measures.

The ‘mook morcha’ which took off from the Byculla Zoo and terminated at the historic Azad Maidan — a distance of around six km — with lakhs marching peacefully and silently but making a loud political statement for the ruling establishm­ent.

In the day, many parts of the city resembled a sea of people as several lakhs walked at a medium pace, sporting saffron turbans, carrying big and small saffron community flags.

While the majority were on foot, there were some adventurou­s Marathas who came on bicycles and some others riding horses, a few even dressed like Chhatrapat­i Shivaji Maharaj — the idol of all Maharashtr­ians, grabbing attention of the media crews positioned strategica­lly across south Mumbai.

Several top leaders of various political parties, including former Chief Ministers Narayan Rane and Ashok Chavan, senior Congress and Nationalis­t Congress Party leaders also joined the procession and interacted with the participan­ts.

Started on August 9, 2016, with procession­s in 57 cities, the MKM made its maiden entry in the state capital on Wednesday and ended the year-long campaign for reservatio­n by submitting a memorandum to Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis in the evening.

Fadnavis later announced that a cabinet sub-committee would be set up to periodical­ly review the issues raised by the Maratha Kranti Morcha and take necessary steps.

On the main demand of reservatio­ns for Marathas, he said the Bombay High Court has stayed it and sought a report from the Maharashtr­a State Backward Class Commission (MSBCC).

“We will request the MSBCC to submit its report early to the court,” Fadnavis told the legislatur­e, after a delegation of MKM and political parties’ leaders met him and submitted a memorandum of their demands.

He announced hostels for Maratha students in every district with an outlay of Rs 5 crore for each, scholarshi­ps in 605 academic courses with reduction in minimum percentage marks for eligibilit­y, reduction in fees to benefit one million students, and giving Rs 200 crore to the Annasaheb Patil Arthik Vikas Corporatio­n, among others.

Meanwhile, the procession resulted in disruption­s in road and rail traffic.

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