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Reservations
may lead to further disintegration
Kuldip Nayar
FOLLOWING the norms of democracy, the constituent assembly in India,
justifiably tagged the seats in the Lok Sabha and the assemblies
to the number of voters in a particular state. The larger number
secured more members and the smaller less. Little did the Constitution
framers realise at that time that such a provision would reward
the states without family planning discipline.
This has, indeed, happened. Over the years, Bihar, Haryana, Madhya
Pradesh, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh have increased their strength
in the Lok Sabha and the assembly on the basis of population. All
the five states are Hindi-speaking. They are situated north of Vindhyas
and are known as the BIMARU states. Non-Hindi speaking states are
however cut up over these states getting more seats.
Census 2000 only confirms that Hindi-speaking states continue to
proliferate in population. They beat the country’s annual growth
rate of 1.9 per cent. Bihar’s increase is 2.85 per cent, Haryana’s
2.47, Madhya Pradesh’s 2.18, Rajasthan’s 2.49 per cent and UP 2.3
per cent. In contrast, the five states down the Vindhyas are below
the annual growth rate. Andhra Pradesh registered 1.3 per cent,
Karnataka 1.59 per cent, Kerala 0.90 per cent, Orissa 1.48 per cent
and Tamil Nadu 1.6 per cent.
Incidentally, the yearly growth of population in Assam, which is
supposed to have changed its demographic complexion because of illegal
migration from Bangladesh, is only 1.73 per cent, below the country’s
average. It proves the hollowness of the governor’s alarming report
that the people from across the border are taking over Assam.
It is clear that the increase and decrease of seats in the Lok Sabha
or the assemblies on the basis of population was not fair from the
start. More voters should claim more representation. But a way has
to be found so that the system doesn’t get distorted.
Parliament has done well to amend the Constitution and freeze the
number of seats at the strength prevailing today. Still, Uttar Pradesh
has 85 seats in the Lok Sabha and Bihar 54. The amendment evoked
no opposition from any political party.
When the draft amendment was placed before the Standing Committee
of the home ministry, members from the Hindi-speaking states were
as vociferous in their support as were those from the non-Hindi
speaking states. None favoured the idea of population being the
criterion.
Unfortunately, the principle not to link seats with the population
has not been applied to the scheduled castes and tribes. The reserved
seats for them may increase, lessening the number of seats in the
general category. This is bound to create bad blood between the
upper and lower castes. Tagging seats to the population is as reprehensible
in the case of Dalits and tribal people as in others. It is clear
that the National Democratic Alliance is playing politics.
To my surprise, most MPs are unwilling to join issue on the point
of watering down any concession for Dalits and tribal people. Political
considerations have come to weigh in the minds of members so much
that their attitude is dictated by what is good for the caste, not
society as a whole.
This brings me to the larger question of reservation. The extension
to the law is given by Parliament every 10 years, without any debate.
This seems to suit all parties who have a vested interest in it
because of electoral advantages.
When the legislation for extension of reservations in jobs and admissions
to professional institutions came up for discussion a few months
ago, I appealed to the Prime Minister to put a time limit to reservations
on the basis of caste, say, 2 per cent tapering off every year.
Thus the pernicious practice would end one day. What was meant to
last 10 years has gone beyond 50 years with no end in sight. I argued
that the criterion should instead be economic backwardness. Nobody
seemed interested in my proposal.
BR Ambedkar, the unchallenged Dalit leader who framed the Constitution,
opposed reservations. He considered them as crutches. He agreed
to the provision only on the understanding that it would not be
continued after 10 years. Even the Supreme Court’s advice that the
creamy layer of the Dalits should be debarred from availing of the
concessions has been ignored. Dalit leaders, who constitute the
creamy layer, are too powerful to allow anything that may give benefits
to the lower half among them.
With reservations for backwards, the problem has got more tangled.
A bigger front in favour of reservations has developed, although
the Dalits and the backward are generally at war with each other.
The demand for reservation has been creating a strong feeling of
inequality among those who are outside the periphery of reservation.
The youth are particularly resentful. They do not buy the argument
that the present generation of Hindus must atone for the sins of
their ancestors. “50 years should have been adequate for penance,”
they argue.
The worst fallout is that the best talent is going abroad. Affirmative
action, as prevalent in the US to accommodate the coloured, is understandable
in a democratic society but not permanent legislation on the basis
of caste. Still worse is the reservation in promotions because the
promotees have neither expertise nor acceptance. This is affecting
work in government offices. The growing sense of denial may reach
a flashpoint and may wash away all kinds of reservations.
Lately, the reservation bug has bitten some Muslim organisations
too. Once again there is the same old talk that one heard before
partition. People seem to forget how the Hindu-Muslim problem got
aggravated in the wake of separate electorate introduced by the
British. The gap has not yet been bridged. The unkindest cut comes
from a Sikh member of the National Minorities Commission, who has
asked MPs of his community to join hands to demand more representation
in various institutions in the country.
The safeguards guaranteed to the minorities in the Constitution
are the nation’s obligation towards them. But representation on
the basis of community may spell ruin for the country.
It is sad that parochial thinking is spreading all over the country—
in the name of community, caste etc. This is telling upon the country’s
pluralistic thinking, ethos and character. In fact, it this trend
isn’t stopped immediately, India may disintegrate.
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