advertisement
Things quickly escalated in Haryana. The army is on the ground trying to quell the agitation, which has reached the gates of Delhi and now threatens the supply of essential good and services, including drinking water in the capital.
The demand for reservation is not a new one. It has surfaced repeatedly over the last decade and more, and each time assurances were given and left unfulfilled
Also Read: Sorry, Jats of Haryana. You’re Just Not Backward Enough
But the violence and disruption seen in the last few days was unprecedented. So what has changed?
This time the issue isn’t just reservation, but a fight to dominate the social and political landscape of Haryana.
Jatwasi is an obviously named village adjacent to the national highway that goes from Delhi to Rohtak. It is close to the ‘blockade’ put up at the Rewari toll both.
A bunch of men sit around, ‘guarding’ the entrance to the Jat hamlet. At first, the crux of their demand for reservation seems simple enough.
The BJP, during its election campaign in the state had promised reservation in government institutions to Jats. They voted for the party. Now they want the government to live up to its end of the deal.
But the courts have ruled that reservation cannot exceed 50 percent, so where should the Jats be accommodated? Sandeep, sarpanch of the village has a simple answer.
Raj Kumar Saini is a focus of the bulk of the Jat rage. His house was attacked, and many from the community had some unkind, even unprintable things to say about him. The BJP leader from Kurukshera is strongly opposed to Jat reservations and has openly threatened to resign if they are included in the Other Backward Classes (OBC) category.
Moochon ki ladai. A battle of mustaches. A question of pride, manhood and manliness. The rise of non-Jat communities, particularly the Sainis and Ahirs, seems to have shaken up Haryana’s social applecart. The jats clearly, are upset by this. After all, before Manohar Lal Khattar, Haryana had a jat chief ministers for 20 years.
But even now, they hold a lion’s share of the jobs in government services, are more than adequately represented in the legislature and have relatively large landholdings.
That’s pretty much the definition of a dominant caste.
Since Jats, at least for now, cannot be legally given a separate quota, they want to be included within the current OBC quota. But the Ahirs (Haryana’s Yadavs) and the Sainis are unlikely to fall in line with the move which digs into their share of government jobs.
On the sidelines of a cricket match between the Saini Samaj and the Rotary Club, Ram Saini, the President of the Rewari Saini Sabha flatly denied that Ram Kumar Saini had made any casteist statements.
The government is now in a tight spot. A resolution to the current crisis, while welcome, can at best act as a band-aid for the deep social and political gashes in Haryana. The real question for the BJP is whether to wield a coalition with numerically dominant OBCs and upper castes, or appease the politically powerful Jats.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
Published: 22 Feb 2016,07:49 AM IST