Ashok Gehlot 
India

Rajasthan Gujjar quota runs into fresh trouble

Petitioner lawyer Abhinav Sharma said the reservation was given citing the proportion of their population, whereas according to the Constitution, quota is not allowed on the basis of census.

Rajesh Asnani

JAIPUR: The Ashok Gehlot governments move to grant an additional 4% reservation to five castes, including Gujjars has been challenged in the high court, within 15 days of its passage of the Rajasthan Backward Classes Amendment Act- 2019 in the Assembly. The Act had legislated for five castes including Gujjar, Lauhar,  Banjara, Rebari and Raika enhancing reservations to 5% from 1% in the MBC (Most Backward category), which took total reserved percentage to 54, above the Supreme Court mandated maximum of 50%.

Petitioner lawyer Abhinav Sharma said the reservation was given citing the proportion of their population, whereas according to the Constitution, quota is not allowed on the basis of census. The petition reads that the state has referred to emergency situation in the state to give 5 percent reservation to other castes including Gujjars. But there were no such condition in the state. Gujjars were agitating and the state was compelled to give in.

Sharma claimed, constitutionally, quotas are allowed on the basis of educational and social backwardness, but this was not kept in mind while granteing additional reservations. He said, the high court had earlier barred  quota above 50 per cent and in this case only one  per cent reservation was due and it was being already being given. Gujjars were given reservations five times since 2008 only to be struck down in courts.

Trump warns 'won't be anything left' of Iran unless it agrees to deal

Kerala CM-designate Satheesan announces 20-member cabinet; 14 new faces, allies accommodated

Indian worker among four killed in one of biggest Ukrainian drone attacks on Russia

Police inaction claims spark outrage in Rajasthan after Jodhpur sisters’ suicide in alleged gangrape case

Drone strike sparks fire on the perimeter of UAE's nuclear power plant, shaking Iran war ceasefire

SCROLL FOR NEXT