UPA decides: Quota from next June

None | ByHT Political Bureau, New Delhi
May 27, 2006 07:16 PM IST

Government has decided to bring an enabling law in Parliament to give effect to 27 per cent OBC quota in central educational institutions.

The Government has decided to bring an enabling law  in the monsoon session of Parliament to give effect to 27 per cent OBC quota in central educational institutions from the academic session starting June 2007.

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The UPA-Left Coordination Committee, which met on Tuesday night, also decided that a small committee of experts (an Oversight Committee) will be set up to draw up a time-bound road map for implementing the quota regime.

Smaller groups consisting of deans, directors and VCs of the institutions concerned will be constituted to work the details for each class of institutions. The Oversight Committee will put together the recommendations of these groups and submit a report by August 31, 2006.

After the three-hour meeting, Defence Minister Pranab Mukherjee, who heads the GoM which went into the issue, said a resolution was adopted to implement the quota regime in "letter and spirit". He said keeping in view the interests of all sections of the student community and to meet their aspirations for opportunities for higher education, the number of seats in central institutions would be increased.

The decision to implement the 93 constitutional amendment through an enabling law came at the meeting of the UPA allies and supporting parties convened to go into the UPA's achievements on its completion of two years in power at the Centre.  Most of the 48 members who attended the meeting spoke on the issue that has brought the pro- and anti-quota lobbies on the streets.  Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi allowed the other members to speak when the issue came up for discussion.  According to the GoM's proposals on the quota regime, the number of seats will have to be increased by 54 per cent to preserve the absolute number of seats in the general category while pushing for quotas. This will cost the exchequer over Rs 10,000 crores.

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