FrontLine

Milestone in social justice

- BY K. VEERAMANI

The Supreme Court’s historic verdict upholding OBC reservatio­n in the all India quota of medical seats is a major achievemen­t in the history of social justice and a significant victory for

the Dravidian movement.

THE Supreme Court of India delivered a historic judgment on January 20, 2022, in Neil Aurelio & Ors vs Union of India and Ors, upholding the constituti­onal validity of 27 per cent reservatio­n for the Other Backward Classes (OBCS) in the All India Quota (AIQ) for undergradu­ate and postgradua­te medical and dental courses (MBBS and BDS/M.S., M.D. and MDS). The seats for the AIQ are contribute­d every year by the States from the medical and dental colleges run by them. The AIQ concept has been in practice since 1986 as per the judgment of the Supreme Court. Every State has to contribute 15 per cent of seats in graduate and 50 per cent of seats in postgradua­te courses of its medical and dental colleges. The total number of seats pooled would provide opportunit­ies to the students to pursue their studies in any State irrespecti­ve of their place of domicile.

In 1986, reservatio­n for the Scheduled Castes (S.CS) and the Scheduled Tribes (S.TS) in education was in vogue only in certain States. But in the AIQ contribute­d by the States, the reservatio­n policy for the

S.CS and the S.TS was not adhered to. It deprived candidates from these categories from getting their share in the seats. When a petition sought reservatio­n in the AIQ for S.CS and S.TS in 2007, the Supreme Court gave a direction to provide reservatio­n for students from these categories.

There was no reservatio­n for the Other Backward Classes (OBCS) though the OBC seats were contribute­d by the States to the AIQ. The States contributi­ng seats to the AIQ have been implementi­ng OBC reservatio­n in the medical and dental colleges run by them. But it was not extended to the OBCS in the AIQ. No action was taken by the Union government to set this right.

In 2006, the 93rd Constituti­onal Amendment was effected enabling reservatio­n for the OBC/S.C./S.T. students in Central educationa­l institutio­ns and private institutio­ns except those run by the minorities. The OBC reservatio­n was extended to Central educationa­l institutio­ns such as the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) and Jawaharlal Institute of Postgradua­te Medical Education and Research

(JIPMER). The spirit behind the reservatio­n provisions of the Constituti­on and the practices consequent­ial to them were not understood by the Union government. It never tried to understand them or perhaps misunderst­ood them and remained reluctant. This deprived the oppressed sections of their rights.

Since the 2008-09 academic year, the Union government had been implementi­ng reservatio­n for OBCS in Central medical educationa­l institutio­ns but denied OBC reservatio­n in the AIQ, even when the contributi­ng States were already implementi­ng the reservatio­n policy in their respective States. The denial of OBC reservatio­n in the AIQ had become routine for the Union government despite consistent demands by the States.

TAMIL NADU’S CHALLENGE

Tamil Nadu became the forerunner in challengin­g the denial of reservatio­n for OBCS in the AIQ. The Dravidar Kazhagam (D.K.), which pioneered the social justice movement, convened an ‘all-party meeting’. It was resolved to file writ petitions in the court individual­ly and seek legal remedy. Accordingl­y, the D.K. filed a writ petition before the Madras High Court on June 4, 2020. The Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK), the Marumalarc­hi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK), the Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK), the Communist Party of India (CPI), the Communist Party of India (Marxist), and the Viduthalai Chiruthaig­al Katchi (VCK), and a few social organisati­ons filed writ petitions in the Supreme Court, which directed them to file petitions first in the Madras High Court. Later, the All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) also filed both as the ruler of the Government of Tamil Nadu and as a political party. It was argued that the Saloni Kumari case (2015), relating to OBC reservatio­n in the AIQ, was pending in the Supreme Court and hence the Madras High Court could not deal with the petitions. It was clarified that the grounds for the Saloni Kumari case were different and that the Madras High Court might proceed with the petitions relating to OBC reservatio­n. The court held that OBCS were entitled to reservatio­n in the AIQ. Through an interim order dated July 27, 2020, the court directed the formation of a committee with the representa­tion of the Union Ministry, the Medical Council of India and the Tamil Nadu government to work out, within three months, a scheme to provide reservatio­n for the OBCS in the AIQ. The court, after the receipt of the report, decided that OBC reservatio­n in the AIQ had to be provided from the 2021-22 academic year.

Later, the notification for admission in the AIQ was published by the Union government without mentioning the reservatio­n for the OBCS. The DMK filed a contempt of court petition in the Madras High Court. In the meantime, writ petitions were filed in the apex court challengin­g the subsequent notification by the Union Ministry specifying OBC reservatio­n in the AIQ. The DMK impleaded itself in this case. By then, the DMK had won the Assembly election, and its president M.K. Stalin assumed office as Chief Minister, in May 2021.

The Supreme Court’s latest verdict in January 2022 (supra) is that OBC reservatio­n in the AIQ is constituti­onally valid. The petitions filed in Tamil Nadu ended a long-drawn legal struggle. It ensured reservatio­n for the OBCS in the AIQ not only for Tamil Nadu but for all the States.

At every stage in the legal battle, the reluctance of the Union government led by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was exposed. In every reply to the notices of the courts, it tried to specify some point or the other with the intention of deterring OBC reservatio­n in the AIQ. The BJP’S stance is not unusual as it cannot deviate from the stand of its ideologica­l mentor, the Rashtriya Swayamsewa­k Sangh (RSS), which is against the principle of reservatio­n for the oppressed. The untiring efforts put in by Stalin ensured success in the legal battle to secure OBC reservatio­n in the AIQ.

SIGNIFICAN­T VERDICT

The judgment of the apex court in January 2022 upholding OBC reservatio­n in AIQ is unique. It is a landmark victory for the social justice cause of the Dravidian movement. The basis of the reservatio­n policy and the perspectiv­e in which it has to be understood have been discussed consistent­ly in a scientific way by the representa­tives of the movement quoting scholarly works on affirmativ­e action. Providing reservatio­n to oppressive sections was also seen as a form of discrimina­tion by the critics of reservatio­n. The anti-reservatio­nists used to say that discrimina­tion in any form is contrary to the doctrine of equality and equal opportunit­ies. Hence, the judgment specified: “Equality of opportunit­y admits discrimina­tion with reason and prohibits discrimina­tion without reason.”

It recalled and emphasised that the policy of reservatio­n was a positive measure by quoting several judgments of the Supreme Court. It said: “….special provisions (including reservatio­n) made for the benefit of any class are not an exception to the general principle of equality. Special provisions are a method to ameliorate the structural inequaliti­es that exist in the society, without which, true or factual equality will remain illusory.”

Another frequent argument against the reservatio­n policy is that

‘merit’ is the casualty. The judgment aptly explained that equality and equal opportunit­ies are not aimed at bringing mere ‘formal equality’ but ‘substantiv­e equality’. It argued that the binary of merit and reservatio­n had now become superfluous once the court had recognised the principle of substantiv­e equality. It referred to the spirit of the Constituen­t Assembly and the purpose for which social justice through reservatio­n was adumbrated in the Constituti­on.

The Supreme Court explained that the oppressed sections have to compete with the historical­ly privileged sections that have been endowed with ‘social and cultural capital’. The disadvanta­ged classes have to overcome the barriers created by these unique social capital that has accrued to the forward classes. The features of social capital such as communicat­ion skills, accent, books or academic accomplish­ments, which have been inherited by the privileged classes, are not available to the competing oppressed sections.

“Performanc­e in competitiv­e examinatio­n or admission in higher educationa­l institutio­ns does not require a great degree of hard work and dedication but it is necessary to understand that ‘merit’ is not solely one’s own making. The rhetoric surroundin­g merit obscures the way in which family, schooling, fortune and a gift of talents that the society currently values aids in one’s advancemen­t… A contributi­on of family habitus, community mileages and inherited skills work to the advantage of individual­s belonging to certain classes, which is then classified as ‘merit’ reproducin­g and reaffirmin­g social hierarchie­s.” The court dismissed the repeated arguments that Articles 15(4), 15(5) and 16(4) are only enabling provisions and cannot be equated with the fundamenta­l rights by stating: “The principles applied for interpreti­ng Article 16 are also to be used for the interpreta­tion of Article 15. Articles 15(4) and Article 15(5) are nothing but a restatemen­t of the guarantee of the right of equality stipulated in Article 15(1).”

These narratives and interpreta­tions of the Supreme Court are only illustrati­ve and not exhaustive of its judgment and would remain as guidelines and references to decide reservatio­n-related cases in future.

It is not just a verdict but a benchmark to protect the constituti­onal mandate of social justice.

HISTORY OF SOCIAL JUSTICE IN TAMIL NADU

Social oppression­s had been prevailing for many centuries even before the arrival of British and other political conquerors. The history of social justice in Tamil Nadu is older than even the Indian constituti­onal history of social justice. Government­al initiative­s on the dispensati­on of social justice date back to 1921. The First Communal G.O. was issued by the Justice Party government, which had to operate with limited power under the diarchical form of governance in the Madras province of British India. The Second Communal G.O. issued in 1922 was also not implemente­d and remained on paper.

During the First Ministersh­ip of Dr P. Subbarayan in 1928, which was supported by the Justice Party and by the initiative of Muthiah Mudaliar, the Minister representi­ng Justice Party, the Third Communal G.O. got implemente­d for the representa­tion of all communitie­s, including Brahmins, in the provincial government jobs. From then onwards, the principal of communal representa­tion got an impetus in employment and education.

The bureaucrac­y had earlier been the exclusive domain of a few of upper castes. The Brahminica­l hegemony in all spheres of life put brakes on the moves of the Justice Party to secure social justice. More than the Justice Party, it was the positive counter move of the Self-respect Movement of E.V. Ramasamy, known as Thanthai Periyar, since 1925 which kept the momentum on. Periyar joined the Congress Party in 1919 with the idea of achieving the goal of communal representa­tion. Even when the Indian National Congress and the Justice Party were opposite political poles, Periyar, though he was a Congressma­n, was in favour of all the moves of the Justice Party and its socially progressiv­e policies, including communal reservatio­n.

A sociopolit­ical culture was establishe­d by Periyar’s Self-respect Movement, even while the popular support base of the Justice Party was shrinking. Every political party that assumed power in Tamil Nadu had to adhere to the principle of communal reservatio­n as a means for social justice. The Congress Ministry that assumed office with Omandur P. Ramasamy as the Premier under provincial autonomy brought exclusive reservatio­n for the “Backward

Classes” in the Communal G.O. Because of this move and other socially progressiv­e measures that were given legal sanctity, Omandur P. Ramasamy was ridiculed by the antisocial justice hegemony as ‘beardless Ramasamy’ (implying that was the only feature that differenti­ated him from Periyar). Periyar and his organisati­on are non-political, avoiding elections and the aspiration to capture power. The land has been tuned to the principle of social justice by the D.K., the new name given by Periyar in 1944.

SETBACK TO COMMUNAL G.O. SET RIGHT

After the Constituti­on came into effect in January 1950, the Communal G.O., which was more than two decades old then, was challenged in Madras High Court by Champakam Dorairajan, a Brahmin. The challenge was that the Communal G.O. was against the equality clause enunciated in the Constituti­on. Without applying for an MBBS course, she had petitioned that the Communal G.O. had deprived her of admission in a medical college. The Madras High Court held that the Communal G.O. was ultra vires of the Constituti­on. On appeal, the Supreme Court confirmed the verdict of the High Court.

Periyar revolted against these judgments stating that communal reservatio­n was the basic right of the oppressed sections. He conducted Statewide agitations continuous­ly. The DMK also joined the struggle under the leadership of C.N. Annadurai, popularly known as Arignar Anna. The Tamil Nadu unit of the Congress party, led by K. Kamaraj, reported the turmoil to Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. Nehru paved the way for amending the Constituti­on for the first time. Article 15(4) was inserted in it to sustain the policy of communal reservatio­n.

The first amendment enabled reservatio­n not only for the OBCS, S.CS and S.TS in Tamil Nadu but also extended it to the rest of the States. Thus, Periyar and his movement remained as the prime force enabling the dispensati­on of reservatio­n to the whole of the

Independen­ce.

In Tamil Nadu the reservatio­n in jobs and education was fixed at 25 per cent for the OBCS and 16 per cent for the S.CS and the S.TS put together during Congress rule.

In 1963, in Balaji vs State of Mysore, the apex court said the total quantum of reservatio­n should not exceed 50 per cent. The ceiling it mentioned was only by way of obiter dictum and not an order for adherence. In 1971, the reservatio­n was enhanced to 31 per cent for OBCS and 18 per cent for the S.CS and the S.TS under the DMK rule by Chief Minister Kalaignar M. Karunanidh­i.

In 1979, M.G. Ramachandr­an as the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu introduced an economic criterion for reservatio­n, fixing the income ceiling of Rs.9,000 a year for OBCS to get reservatio­n. Reservatio­n based on an economic criterion is ultra vires of the Constituti­on, which approves backwardne­ss only on social and educationa­l basis. Even at the time of the First Constituti­onal amendment, the idea of introducin­g an economic criterion for reservatio­n was deeply discussed and debated. The economic status of a person is not fixed and is ever-changing. The supporters of economic criterion in Parliament secured only five votes, whereas the opposing forces got 243 votes.

The Constituti­on speaks of reservatio­n only for the socially and educationa­lly backward classes explicitly in Articles 15(4) and 340. With respect to reservatio­n, it is stated clearly that backwardne­ss has

country

after to be reckoned only on social and educationa­l basis. Parliament­ary debates have clarified the spirit of Article 15(4) on social and educationa­l backwardne­ss and have highlighte­d the irrelevanc­e an economic criterion in the matter.

Foreseeing the damage likely to be caused to OBC reservatio­n by the ‘income ceiling’ of the Tamil Nadu State government, the D.K. started an agitation for the withdrawal of the order, and campaigned against the ‘income ceiling for OBC reservatio­n’.

Chief Minister M.G. Ramachandr­an, popularly known as MGR, adamantly refused to take note of the the intricacie­s of the concept of social justice. The D.K., the DMK, the CPI, the IUML and a few leaders of the Congress were on a continuous war path against the G.O. Many OBC associatio­ns were persuaded by the D.K. to participat­e in the agitation by highlighti­ng the reservatio­n benefits that the children from OBC communitie­s would gain. It organised a massive agitation against the order, burnt copies of the G.O. and sent the ashes to the Tamil Nadu government secretaria­t as a mark of protest.

ELIMINATIO­N OF ‘ECONOMIC CRITERION’

In the parliament­ary elections held in 1980, MGR’S AIADMK faced a rout, securing only two of the 39 Lok Sabha seats in Tamil Nadu. The Chief Minister realised that something had gone wrong. His senior party colleagues pointed out that the reason for the defeat was his G.O., which went against the policy of communal reservatio­n, the fundamenta­l fabric of Tamil Nadu.

MGR immediatel­y convened an all-party meeting to discuss the subject. The D.K. had an opportunit­y to participat­e in it and explain the intricacie­s of the issue. It explained why the G.O. fixing an income ceiling for OBC reservatio­n was meaningles­s. For instance, if an OBC government servant earns in a year less than Rs.9,000, his children would be eligible to get reservatio­n benefits. If the same person is transferre­d to Chennai city, he would earn more

through city allowances. His total annual income would then exceed Rs.9,000, depriving his children of reservatio­n benefits. The flexible nature of economic status is ultra vires of the Constituti­on and hence, was not included in the formulatio­n of reservatio­n policy.

ENHANCEMEN­T EXCEEDING FIFTY PER CENT

MGR was convinced, and a few days later the G.O. on income ceiling was withdrawn. Besides, MGR enhanced the OBC reservatio­n from 31 per cent to 50 per cent. The total reservatio­n in Tamil Nadu became 68 per cent (50 per cent for OBCS plus 18 per cent for S.CS and S.TS). With the exclusive 1 per cent for the S.TS, the total percentage rose to 69 per cent in 1989.

It was a historic turning point in the history of social justice. The hesitation on the part of the rulers to enhance the reservatio­n above 50 per cent is unwarrante­d. The impediment was removed by enhancing the reservatio­n for OBCS to 50 per cent in Tamil Nadu. The State, with the ideologica­l strength of Periyar’s movement, had shown the way to the rest of the States. However, some States have not enhanced the limit beyond 50 per cent because of a lack of awareness about its significance or hesitation to take such a bold step.

THE MANDAL MILESTONE

The implementa­tion of the Mandal Commission recommenda­tion of 27 per cent reservatio­n for OBCS in

Union government jobs and its upholding by the apex court was the next milestone on the path of social justice.

The Mandal Commission, constitute­d as per Article 340 during the Janata Party rule in 1979, presented its report to the Congress government in 1980. The recommenda­tions remained on paper without any follow-up. Continuous demand was made by the social justice forces for tabling the report in Parliament and for accepting its recommenda­tions. The D.K. cnducted 16 agitations and held 42 conference­s at the all-india level to bring the Mandal recommenda­tions to the limelight.

In 1990, Prime Minister V.P. Singh implemente­d one of the recommenda­tions, that is, 27 per cent reservatio­n for OBCS in the jobs of Union government and its undertakin­gs. Karunanidh­i, then Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, played a major role in having the Mandal report implemente­d As usual, the Office Memorandum announcing its implementa­tion was challenged in the apex court. Ultimately, the constituti­onal validity of reservatio­n for OBCS was upheld in Indra Sawhney vs Union of India. But exceeding the scope of the legal challenge, the apex court pronounced that the total reservatio­n must not exceed 50 per cent. The 50 per cent ceiling on reservatio­n is nowhere mentioned in the Constituti­on. The total reservatio­n of 69 per cent in Tamil Nadu faced a threat.

At this juncture, J. Jayalalith­aa was the Tamil Nadu Chief Minister. The D.K. suggested the way out to protect 69 per cent reservatio­n.

The D.K.’S advocacy was: Article 31(C) provides power to the States to legislate and protect 69 per cent reservatio­n. An exclusive legislatio­n may be enacted by getting the assent of the President of India. In order to protect the proposed Act, with retrospect­ive effect it may be placed in the Ninth Schedule as per Article 31(B), and 31(C) of the Constituti­on and remain immune to judicial review. Such placement of the Act requires a Constituti­onal Amendment to be made by Parliament.

The D.K.’S suggestion was accepted by Jayalalith­aa. The State Legislativ­e Assembly was exclusivel­y convened for the purpose and the Bill was passed unanimousl­y by all the legislatur­e parties. A delegation of parties led by the Chief Minister and the author as the D.K. general secretary met Prime Minister P.V. Narasimha Rao to apprise him of the significance of the Bill. His interventi­on to get the President’s assent for the Bill was sought. The Bill turned Act was placed in the Ninth Schedule through the 76th Constituti­onal Amendment in 1994. All the parties in Parliament unanimousl­y accepted the move of Tamil Nadu. Constituti­onal protection for 69 per cent reservatio­n in Tamil Nadu became a reality. The D.K., and Tamil Nadu, the land of Periyar, ensured the enactment of an exclusive legislatio­n seeking to implement the reservatio­n policy with retrospect­ive effect and due constituti­onal amendment. This towering achievemen­t took place in 1994, but its significance was not properly understood in political circles. Since 1980 through G.OS and from 1994 through an exclusive enactment, 69 per cent reservatio­n has been under implementa­tion in Tamil Nadu. Many States which have realised the need to enhance total reservatio­n beyond 50 per cent in their respective States consider the Tamil Nadu Act as a model. This includes a few States ruled by the BJP and its allies. m K. Veeramani is president,

Dravidar Kazhagam.

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