OBC (Other backward class/es) quota: India
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Exemption for certain educational institutes
From the archives of The Times of India 2007, 2009
UP varsity may be exempt from giving quota to OBCs
Univ Already Meets Upper Limit Of 50% SC/ST Reservation
Akshaya Mukul | TNN
New Delhi: In a move that could stir OBC politics in the Hindi heartland, Babasaheb Bhimrao Ambedkar University (BBAU) in Lucknow, a central university, is being exempted from giving reservation to OBCs in admission.
Till now, BBAU has not been giving reservation to OBCs as SC/ST quota already meets the upper limit of 50%. For long, denial of reservation to OBCs has been a issue in BBAU.
Exemption from OBC reservation to BBAU and other kinds of exemptions — all related to quota — to central educational institutions in the north-east states are part of the series of amendments proposed in the Central Educational Institutions (reservation in admission) Amendment Act.
The amendment proposal does not mention BBAU but most of the exemptions, sources said, were specific to one institution or the other. For instance, the amendment seeks to bring down OBC reservation to less than 27% in states like Tripura and Sikkim where SC/ST reservation is around 34%. Here, reservation for OBCs will be only 16%.
There is also a proposal to apply reservation policy of the state government to state seats in a central educational institution. Last year, a peculiar situation had arisen in National Institute of Technology, Agartala and HRD ministry had to protect state reservation through a presidential order.
The amendment defines “north-east” to cover all north-eastern states including Sikkim but excludes the non-tribal areas of Assam. This has been done since two central universities — Tezpur University and Assam University — are in non-tribal areas and will be able to implement 27% OBC reservation.
The amendment also seeks to extend the period of implementing reservation from three years to six years. Now, all central educational institutions and universities will have time till 2012. This has been done so that universities like Jamia Milia Islamia can implement OBC reservation.
For the last three years, JMI has been defying HRD ministry on reservation. With concerted attempt to give it a tag of minority institution, it is unlikely that reservation in JMI will become a reality soon.
The amendment also proposes to increase the number of seats in unpopular branches of study or faculty. The proposal says increase will be with reference to the number of seats in that subject in the year OBC reservation came into force or the number of seats actually filled, whichever is less. Caste Cauldron? Exemption from OBC quota is part of the series of amendments proposed in the Central Educational Institutions Amendment Act The amendment seeks to extend the period of implementing reservation from three years to six years. Now, all central educational institutions have time till 2012 The amendment proposes to increase the no. of seats in unpopular branches of study
Tamil Nadu and Karnataka
From the archives of The Times of India 2007, 2009
1-yr respite for TN, K’taka quota laws
Place OBC Population Data To Justify Quotas Exceeding 50% Ceiling, Says SC
TIMES NEWS NETWORK
New Delhi: Supreme Court on Tuesday gave one-year extension to Tamil Nadu and Karnataka laws providing quota over and above the 50% cap fixed by apex court judgments for admission and employment, but asked the governments to place quantifiable data about OBC population before the backward commissions to justify quotas exceeding the ceiling it laid down.
The court’s insistence that the two state governments back up their pitch for quotas far exceeding the 50% cap can lead to renewed pressure for including caste as a criterion in the ongoing census. More importantly, the order is interpreted to suggest that the court could consider relaxing the 50% ceiling it prescribed if the states were to support their demand by evidence of the size of the OBC population and their “social and educational backwardness” — the eligibility for quota.
SC introduced the 50% limit on reservations including those for SCs/STs in November 1992 in its verdict in the Indira Sawhney case where it upheld the implementation of Mandal Commission’s recommendation to reserve 27% of central jobs for OBCs.
There were subsequent judgments, including Ashoka Thakur, which upheld extension of 27% reservation in admissions to OBCs in central government educational institutes but reiterated that the quantum of quota could not exceed 50%.
However, both Tamil Nadu and Karnataka, which had provided reservation in excess of 50% even prior to Indira Sawhney judgment, brought in legislations justifying the quantum on the ground that they were done prior to the 1992 judgment.
Tamil Nadu, which provides 69% reservation, went a step ahead and put the TN Backward Classes, Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Reservation of Seats in Educational Institutions and Appointment or Posts in Services under the State) Act, 1993, in the 9th Schedule of the Constitution, thus barring judicial scrutiny of the constitutional validity of the law. An identical law enacted by Karnataka in 1994 provided upto 73% reservation.
Both state laws providing for quota in excess of 50% cap were challenged before the SC and even contempt petitions were filed as they violated the Constitution bench’s Indira Sawhney judgment.
In its 2007 judgment in I R Cohello case, the SC ruled that judicial scrutiny of a 9th Schedule law was possible if it was shown that the legislation was violative of the basic structure of the Constitution.
In the light of this judgment, a three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice S H Kapadia on Tuesday agreed to extend the life of these legislations, operating for more than 15 years, for another year, but with an important rider that the state governments would revisit these laws and produce quantifiable data to prove before state backward commissions the necessity of reservation in excess of 50%. While Tamil Nadu has a backward commission, Karnataka is yet to constitute one.
Panchayat polls
From the archives of The Times of India 2007, 2009
SC upholds OBC quota in panchayat polls
TIMES NEWS NETWORK
New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld the validity of reservation for SCs, STs, women and backward classes (OBCs) in panchayat elections but said quota in local self-government should be for a much shorter period than that for jobs and admissions to educational institutions.
It also upheld reservation of the posts of chairperson of panchayats in favour of SC, ST, women and OBC candidates in rotation.
However, in reserving seats in panchayat elections for SC, ST and OBC candidates, the quantum of quota cannot breach the 50% limit, ruled a five-judge constitution Bench comprising Chief Justice K G Balakrishnan and Justices R V Raveendran, D K Jain, P Sathasivam and J M Panchal.
“The upper ceiling of 50% vertical reservation in favour of SC/ST/OBCs should not be breached in the context of local self-government. Exceptions can only be made in order to safeguard the interests of STs in the matter of their representation in panchayats located in scheduled areas,” said the CJI, who authored the 70-page unanimous judgment.
Though the apex court upheld the reservation in local self-government, it did sound a caution for the legislature. “The nature and purpose of reservation in the context of local self-government is considerably different from that of higher education and public employment,” it said. Holding it to be distinct from the reservation scheme practiced in jobs and educational institutions, the Bench said the same logic could not be applied while furthering quota in local self-government.
“Even when made, they need not be for a period corresponding to the period of reservation for the purposes of Articles 15(4) and (16(4), but can be much shorter,” the apex court said.
Backwardness, determination of
Mar 18 2015
Caste cannot be sole criterion for determining backwardness, says SC
Amit Choudhary
The Supreme Court said the government must devise new methods and yardsticks to determine backwardness of a community for conferring reservation and not grant OBC status solely on the basis of caste. It said reservation given to communities based on historical injustice and prejudice alone would result in diluting the social welfare protection which is ensured through reservations given to most deserving backward class citizens. It said a government could not blind itself to other forms of backwardness suffered by other communities.
“Owing to historical conditions, particularly in Hindu society, recognition of back wardness has been associated with caste. Though caste may be a prominent and distinguishing factor for easy determination of backwardness of a social group, this court has been routinely discouraging its identification solely on the basis of caste,“ a bench of Justices Ranjan Gogoi and Rohinton F Nariman said.
The court also asked why communities in the Other Backward Classes (OBC) list was increasing and why there were no exclusions from it despite perceptible all round development of the nation.
“The percentage of OBC population estimated at `not less than 52%' (in Indra Sawhney judgment popularly known as Mandal verdict) certainly must have gone up, as over the last two decades there has been only inclusions in the central and state OBC lists.heme,“ the bench said.
The apex court said the government must increase vigilance to discover emerging forms of backwardness and referred to its recent verdict recognizing the `third gender' as a backward community entitled to reservation.
“ Identification of these new emerging groups must engage the attention of the state and the constitutional power and duty must be concentrated to discover such groups rather than to enable groups of citizens to recover lost ground in claiming preference and benefits on the basis of historical prejudice,“ it said.