Tuesday, December 6, 2011

MPJ-Appointment with Governor of Maharashtra

Dear Friends,
 
After long wait Movement for Peace and Justice(MPJ) has got a call from Governor of Maharashtra to submit their Memorandum on8th December 2011 at 11am in Mumbai RajBhavan.
 
The Memorandum carries list of demands for Welfare and Empowerment of Minorities in accordance with recommendation of Sachar Committee Report.
 
We from MPJ invite you all to be present or send your representatives for the coverage in your relevant media.
 
With Warm regards            mpjmedia@gmail.com
Soheb Lokhandwala            9833627173
MPJ Mah.


Dear All,
PM has decided to create a sub-quota within 27% reservation for other OBCs.
 
We demanded Affirmative action as suggested by Sachar Committee report which can be seen by implementing Ranganath Misra report and among other demands the key is to setup 'Equal Opportunity Commission'.
 
MPJ once again reiterate its demand for complete Implementation of Sachar Report for the Empowerment of Minorities.
 
Stand taken by Movement for Peace&Justice(MPJ) has being not looked into porperly.
 
For the same MPJ will soon meet the Governor of Mah. to present its memorandum,the date of the meeting will given as soon as possible.
 
with regards
Soheb Lokhandwala
mpj media(Mah.)
 
 
 

New Delhi, Nov. 23: The Manmohan Singh government has decided to create a sub-quota for Muslims within the 27 per cent reservation for Other Backward Castes (OBCs) and an announcement is likely before the Uttar Pradesh elections next summer.

Although there is no provision for reservation in the Constitution on the basis of religion, many state governments have earmarked separate quotas for Muslims on the ground of backwardness.

While the plan was being discussed, some had suggested the Andhra Pradesh model where the entire Muslim community has been declared backward and given a separate 4 per cent quota.

Others favoured a sub-quota within the 27 per cent reservation. They pointed out that such a move wouldn't require a constitutional amendment but only a government notification, obviating the need to get a parliamentary sanction.

The Andhra model has a problem, though. Its constitutional validity is being examined by the Supreme Court, after the high court ruled by a majority of 5:2 that the act declaring the entire community backward was unsustainable and violative of Article 14 (equality before law) of the Constitution.

The former Left government in Bengal had also decided to set aside a 10 per cent quota for Muslims within the 27 per cent quota. But in July this year, over a month after coming to power, Mamata Banerjee announced a bill for government job reservation for Muslims and said the 10 per cent quota the Left government had introduced would be scrapped.

Several states including Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu have crossed the 50 per cent bar set by the Supreme Court on quotas and given reservation to Muslims by declaring the entire community backward. In Tamil Nadu, there is separate quota of 3.5 per cent for Muslims and Christians.

The Ranganath Mishra Commission recommended reservation for Muslims in the "backward" category and the argument was buttressed by the Sachar Committee findings showing extreme backwardness in the entire community.

Several Muslim organisations have demanded reservations, arguing that there should be no discrimination by citing religion because backwardness, the overriding factor, has been established by the Sachar committee.

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1111124/jsp/frontpage/story_14793066.jsp

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