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September
24, 2007
Press Release
Take
Concrete Steps to Implement Sachar Committee Recommendations
The communal and divisive
approach adopted by the BJP and the Sangh Parivar on the Sachar Committee
recommendations is highly condemnable. The Sachar Report has blown the myth of
minority appeasement by presenting scientifically collated evidence, which shows
that minority communities, especially Muslims, face deprivation and
discrimination in myriad forms. Despite this, the BJP continues to shamelessly
level the minority appeasement charge and is seeking to destabilize social
harmony by opposing the implementation of the Sachar Committee recommendations.
CPI (M) strongly condemns this attempt to prevent social justice and affirmative
action for the minorities. We call upon the UPA Government to initiate urgent
and concrete steps to implement the Sachar Committee recommendations.
It is unfortunate that the
“Follow-up Action on the Recommendations of the Sachar Committee” placed in
Parliament on 31st August 2007 by the Minister of Minority Affairs,
falls far short of the requirements. Neither have any time frame been set for
the implementation of the programmes announced in the ‘follow-up action’ nor
any indication of specific financial allocations to implement the programmes.
Moreover, there are serious omissions in the ‘follow-up action’. For
instance, there is no mention of steps being taken to ensure justice to victims
of communal violence. Important steps like land reforms and distribution of land
and house sites to the landless and homeless within minorities and setting up of
a special mechanism for monitoring the inclusion of OBC Muslims in the State
wise OBC lists and OBC reserved quotas also find no mention. The Government has
also not responded to the demand for extending reservation to dalit Muslims and
dalit Christians made by the CPI (M) as well as other parties and organizations.
The recommendations of the Ranganath Mishra Commission set up to examine the
question of reservation for dalits within the Muslim and Christian communities
have not been made public.
This approach belies the
UPA Government’s commitment to ensure justice for the minorities. Between the
BJP’s vicious anti-minority campaign and the UPA Government’s tokenism, the
Sachar Committee recommendations are getting jettisoned. A closer look at two
crucial areas, namely education and access to credit, exposes the lack of
political will displayed so far by the UPA Government in implementing the
recommendations of the Sachar Committee.
Education
Why has the Government
totally ignored the Action Plan prepared by the High-level Committee under MOS
HRD Shri M.A.A. Fatmi on matters concerning education contained in the Sachar
Committee recommendations?
v
This high-level committee submitted its proposed action plan on 31st
January 2007. The action plan included, among other things, launching a focussed
literacy campaigns in the Minority Concentration Districts (MCDs), building Jana
Shikshan Sansthans (adult education and vocational training institutes) in all
MCDs, building one Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalaya (KGBV) in each of the
Minority Concentrated Blocks and expanding the modernization scheme for Madarsas.
v
Specific
financial requirements for implementing the action plan during the Eleventh Five
Year Plan was also suggested by the high-level committee, totaling Rs. 5434.40
crores (See Annex A). However, these recommendations made in January 2007 were
ignored in Budget 2007-08, which was the first Budget of the Eleventh Plan.
v
For
example, whereas the financial requirement for Kasturba Gandhi Balika Vidyalayas
was stated as Rs. 230 crores for the Plan period, no allocations were made for
KGBVs in Budget 2007-08. Similarly, the additional allocation of Rs. 1500 crores
required for the focussed literacy campaign and Jana Shikshan Sansthans in MCDs
for the Plan period was ignored. The total outlay for literacy and adult
education was increased in Budget 2007-08 only by around Rs. 163 crore over last
year, the allocation for MCDs being a fraction of the amount. Shockingly, as
against the additional requirement of Rs. 625 crores for the Madarsa
modernization programme cited by the high-level committee, the allocation in
Budget 2007-08 was increased by only Rs. 4.50 crore over last year. These meagre
allocations show that the Government has been unwilling to follow the action
plan drawn up by its own high-level committee on education.
Why is the Government
dragging its feet in giving scholarships to students from minority communities,
even after announcing it in the Budget?
v
In Budget 2006-07 the Finance Minister announced: “Merit-cum-means
based scholarships encourage students to pursue higher studies. Government will
finance 20,000 such scholarships to students belonging to the minority
communities. Once the scheme is finalized in 2006-07, I intend to allocate the
necessary funds.” This promise was not implemented by the Government. In reply
to Rajya Sabha question # 4197 dated 14th May 2007, the Minority
Affairs Minister said that the budget announcement had
not been implemented (See
Annex B).
v
It was further announced by the Finance Minister in Budget 2007-08:
“Three scholarship programmes are being implemented for students
belonging to minority communities. I propose to make the following allocations:
Pre-matric scholarships Rs.72 crore, Post-matric scholarships Rs.90 crore,
Merit-cum-Means scholarships at graduate and post-graduate levels Rs.48.60
crore.” The ‘follow-up action’ of the Minority Affairs Minister, tabled
six months after the Budget was placed, states that the 20,000 Merit-cum-Means
“has been approved” and the pre-matric and post-matric scholarship scheme
“will be introduced shortly”. Once again, no financial allocation has been
mentioned in this regard. It is clear that after reneging on the budget
commitment of providing scholarships to students belonging to minority
communities made last year, the Government is once again dragging its feet in
implementing the promise made in this year’s budget.
Access
to Credit
Why
is the commitment made by the Prime Minister to ensure 15% of priority sector
lending for minority communities being ignored by other arms of the Government?
v
Since a very large section of the Muslim community is self-employed,
ensuring access to credit at low rates of interest is vital to improving their
conditions of livelihood. Loans to minority communities as a percentage of total
priority sector loans had decreased from 9.62 % in March 2002 to 9.35 % in March
2006. In keeping with the recommendation of the Sachar Committee, the Prime
Minister’s 15 point programme for the welfare of the minorities, which was
approved by the Cabinet in June 2006, state: “It will be ensured that an
appropriate percentage of the priority sector lending in all categories is
targeted for the minority communities.”
v
There has been a lot of resistance to specifying the ‘appropriate’
percentage of priority sector loans to be targeted for the minority communities.
Between July and December 2006, as many as eight letters were written to the
Finance Minister from the PMO and the Minority Affairs Ministry, on the need to
set a target of 15% of priority sector loans for minorities (See Annex C), but
no instructions were issued by the Finance Ministry in this regard. It was only
in January 2007, that the Finance Minister admitted that a 15 % target has
indeed been set by the Government. The ‘follow-up action’ of the Minority
Affairs Ministry, however, dilutes that commitment when it states: “Efforts
will be made for stepping up priority sector lending to minorities from the
present level to 15% over a period of three years.”
v
Whether the Government would meet even this diluted commitment is
unclear. One day before the Minority Affairs Minister tabled the ‘follow-up
action’ in Parliament, the Reserve Bank of India released its Annual Report,
2006-07. A relevant section of the report states: “With a view to according
priority to the most needy, a special drive has been initiated by the Regional
Offices of the Reserve Bank for 100 per cent financial inclusion in the
districts with maximum concentration of SCs, STs and minorities. For this
purpose, the Regional Offices have been advised to use a list of 121 minority
concentrated districts forwarded by the Ministry of Finance, Government of India
together with Census/other data on SCs/STs and minorities. The Reserve Bank has
so far identified eight such districts (four in Maharashtra, three in Tamilnadu
and one in Haryana) for 100 per cent financial inclusion.” (See Annex D)
v
The ‘follow-up action’ of the Minority Affairs Minister mentions 90
Minority Concentration Districts (MCDs). While the RBI Annual Report cites a
list of 121 MCDs prepared by the Finance Ministry, the basis for its identifying
only 8 districts out of that 121 is not at all clear. Nor is their any mention
of the target of 15 % of priority sector loans to minority communities in the
RBI Annual Report.
On the question of ensuring
justice for the victims of communal riots, the record of the UPA Government is
extremely disappointing. The Central Government did not accept the demand for a
CBI inquiry into the major cases of killings during the Gujarat riots of 2002.
The culprits of Babri Masjid demolition are yet to be punished. Moreover, the
Congress led Government in Maharashtra continues to defy the nationwide demand
for action on the Srikrishna Commission Report on the Bombay riots that named
the political leaders and police officials who had led and connived in the
killing of over 800 Muslims. The Sachar Committee had observed: “The
lackadaisical attitude of the government and the political mileage sought
whenever communal riots occur has been very painful for the Community…The
governmental inaction in bringing to book the perpetrators of communal violence
has been a sore point.” The UPA Government has so far not been able to bring
any improvement in the situation.
Following an All India
Convention held in Delhi in March 2007, the CPI (M) had submitted a Charter
for the Advancement of the Muslim Community to the Prime Minister. A key
demand in the Charter was to make a sub-plan for the minorities on the lines of
the tribal sub-plan and the special component plan for the SCs. The Left Front
Government in West Bengal has already made such a sub-plan for minorities, which
was announced in the State Budget 2007-08. Unfortunately, the UPA Government has
not accepted this demand so far. The CPI (M) is of the view that without a
dedicated sub-plan for minorities along with allocation of adequate resources,
the recommendations of the Sachar Committee cannot be implemented in a holistic
manner.
| BRINDA KARAT,
Polit Bureau Member, CPI (M)
& MP, Rajya Sabha
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MD. SALIM,
Convenor, Committee on Minorities, CPI (M) & MP, Lok Sabha |
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