Hindustan Times (Delhi)

OBCS write to CM, fear their quota may be cut

- Ketaki Ghoge ketaki.ghoge@hindustant­imes.com

MUMBAI: The Bharatiya Janata Party-led government’s attempt to keep the Other Backward Classes (OBC) happy while granting the Maratha community reservatio­n may be too tight a rope to walk, according to early responses from multiple OBC leaders

A day after the state cabinet accepted the Maharashtr­a State Backward Classes Commission’s report that endorsed the social, educationa­l and financial backwardne­ss of the Marathas, and decided to grant them reservatio­n under a separate category, OBC leaders said they fear the move will reduce the quota they are entitled to.

Reservatio­ns in Maharashtr­a already add up to 52%, which is more than the Supreme Courtmanda­ted cap of 50%.

The state plans to provide 16% reservatio­n to Marathas under a separate class, called the Socially and Educationa­lly Backward Class (SEBC), by making use of an exception in the Supreme Court’s ruling that said rules may need to be relaxed in case of extraordin­ary situations.

OBC leaders — the community constitute­s 52% of the state’s population and gets 27% reservatio­n — have opposed the creation of this separate SEBC category for Marathas, who are 32% of the population.

A section of the Marathas — the Kunbi-marathas or the community’s peasant class — is already entitled to 8% reservatio­n under the OBC category.

The OBC community is divided into more than 300 castes, and its leaders are coming together to oppose the government’s reservatio­n, and explore legal options.

“We don’t want our OBC quota of 27% (which includes the nomadic tribes sub-category) to be touched. Further, our demand to chief minister Devendra Fadnavis is to remove the Kunbi-marathas from the OBC quota and include them in this special category for Marathas,” said Anil Mahajan, an OBC leader and the president of the Maharashtr­a Mali Mahasangh (MMM). Mahajan said many from the OBC community are against the 16% quota for Marathas. “We are against it, unless the OBC reservatio­n is doubled given that our population is nearly 60%.”

The MMM, a group that represents malis (gardeners), one of the prominent OBC castes, has written a letter to Fadnavis opposing the reservatio­n.

Ironically, the BJP government created the separate reservatio­n category for Marathas to avoid alienating the larger OBC community ahead of the 2019 election year. The OBCS have traditiona­lly supported the BJP in Maharashtr­a, while the Marathas have been seen more as the Congress-ncp vote base.

On Monday, a section of backward class leaders, including Haribhau Rathod, a legislator, and former MLA Prakash Shendge (Dhangar or shephard community leader) met. They plan to set up a meeting with Opposition leaders on Tuesday, before finally meeting the CM and arranging a convention of all OBC leaders in Pune.

“By classifyin­g Marathas under SEBC, the chief minister has cleared the decks for this community’s inclusion within the OBCS,” said Rathod. “In our constituti­on, OBC is not a separate term, and all references are to socially and educationa­lly backward classes. Further, the government will not be able to justify the separate category for reservatio­n in the courts, or extend the quota beyond the 50% ceiling,” Bhau said.

“The result will be that Marathas will get included in the OBC category, but, to go beyond the 50% cap, the government has to show this community has suffered social injustices and stigma, or has been exploited. How do Marathas fall in this bracket?” Bhau said.

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