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Haryana witnessed
unprecedented mayhem spread over a week in February in the wake of an agitation
launched by the Jats to demand reservation in government jobs. At least 30
people were killed and over 400 injured while frenzied mobs indulged in arson
and loot leading to a loss estimated at over Rs 25,000 crore. Nearly a thousand
trains were cancelled or diverted and the highways remained blocked for close to a week.
Towards the fag end of the agitation, and by the time the army helped
restore normalcy, the Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar announced his
government’s decision to accept the demand for reservation. It was seen
as buckling under pressure, raising the possibility of other sections of society exerting similar pressure to get their demands accepted.
Khattar’s assurance came even after legal experts pointed out that the courts had already stayed a similar provision sought by former CM Bhupinder Singh Hooda, not to forget the Supreme Court ruling on the limit of reservation in government jobs. Members of other backward classes (OBCs), who were to be affected if the Jat community also got reservation, too were strongly opposed to the demand but Khattar went ahead and declared his government’s decision to accept the Jats’ demand. Perhaps he didn’t want to be seen annoying the Jats who constitute 29 per cent of the state’s population.
Not totally convinced by Khattar’s assurance, the Jats set out a deadline for the state government to introduce legislation before the end of the state assembly’s budget session or face another agitation. It was to beat this deadline that the Khattar government piloted a bill, the Haryana Backward Classes (Reservation in Services and Admission in Educational Institutions) Bill, 2016, to provide reservation to Jats and five other communities under a newly carved category termed BC(C).
To ensure that the legislation
was not struck down (as was done by the courts earlier), the government also
pushed through a resolution seeking help from the Centre to place the new Bill in the 9th
Schedule as the Acts under it are not open to judicial review and can’t be
invalidated on the ground of violation of the fundamental rights.
The Bill is a non-starter also due to the fact that a nine-bench ruling by the Supreme Court has already upheld the authority of the judiciary to review any law including those included in the 9th Schedule. The Bill, passed on Tuesday, provides reservations in excess of the 50 per cent prescribed by the Supreme Court and is bound to meet the same fate as the earlier ones.
While
bringing in the Bill, the Khattar government had primarily relied upon the
recommendations of the Haryana Backward Classes Commission of 2011 to make out
a case for grant of quota to the Jats and five other castes. However, the apex
court had trashed the recommendations of the Commission while setting aside the
inclusion of Jat community in the OBC category on March 17 last year.
Even as
the Khattar government had been seeking to take ‘credit’ for bringing in the
legislation, the Jat leaders have expressed cynicism. Perhaps aware of the
likely judicial intervention and the poor grounds on which the new Bill is
sought to be based, a section of the Jat leaders are sticking to their earlier
demand - that the Jats be granted reservation in the existing 27 per cent
reservation for the OBC category. They think that any increase in percentage of
reservations is bound to be struck down by the courts and that the new law is
only an exercise in futility.
As was expected, the provisions of the new Bill have been challenged before the high court and even before it could get the governor’s nod to become an Act. The petitioner, Advocate Shakti Singh, has pleaded that the state’s action was biased, malafide and arbitrary and that it was taken under pressure of a particular community.
Even BJP MP Rajkumar Saini, who publicly opposed reservation for Jats in OBC
category, has declared that he would move the Supreme Court against the legislation
and has called it “murder of democracy”. The MP, who is also president of the All India OBC Brigade, has said it was an “atrocity”
committed on the OBCs and has vowed to quit politics if the new provisions were
not reversed.
Clearly
the Khattar government’s proposal may not see the light of the day with the
known stand of the judiciary and stiff resistance from other sections of the
society. If at all, the move to appease the Jat community may have opened
floodgates for more groups or communities trying to arm twist the government on
various issues.
(The writer is a Chandigarh-based senior journalist)
Also read:
Beyond Haryana’s Quota Politics: After the Tragedy Comes the Farce
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Published: 01 Apr 2016,01:52 PM IST