http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/PoliticsNation/CWC_asks_govt_to_be_cautious_on_quota/articleshow/2101664.cms

CWC asks govt to be cautious on quota
AARTHI RAMACHANDRAN

TIMES NEWS NETWORK[ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 06, 2007 12:48:01 AM]

NEW DELHI: The Congress seems to have come around the idea that
reservation is a double-edged sword. The party's apex decision-making
body, Congress Working Commitee (CWC) has asked the UPA government to
"approach the issue of reservations with caution". The matter was
raised during a CWC meeting on Monday in the context of the Gurjar
agitations in Rajasthan.

The Congress' warning is likely to have a sobering effect on advocates
of reservation within the Central government. It could imply that
recommendations of bodies such as the National Commission of Religious
and Linguistic Minorities (NCRLM), which has asked for granting
Scheduled Caste (SC) status to Christians and Muslims amongst Dalits,
will be put on ice. It could also mean that leaders such as Arjun
Singh, who have been at the forefront of the government's OBC quota
policy, will have to go slow on such future proposals.

The advice came while discussing the Gurjar demand for ST status and
the clashes between that community and the Meenas. One member of the
high-profile body is said to have raised the issue of granting
reservations on the basis of economic criteria as a means to resolve
the quota tangle all over the country.

Though party sources did not name the CWC member in question, AICC
leader Satyavrat Chaturvedi, speaking in his personal capacity,
identified economic status as a "rational criteria" for granting
reservations. A source in the party said: "The issue (of economic
criteria) was raised, however, the CWC decided not to discuss the
matter of reservations in detail given the tense situation in
Rajasthan. We also advised the government that it should approach the
matter of reservations with great caution." Congress sources also said
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh did not speak at all during Monday's CWC
meeting.

Incidentally, the latest member of the Congress to have brought up the
issue of reservation is the prime minister himself. He had hinted
support to BSP chief Mayawati's idea of providing reservations to the
poor among the upper castes at a conference on the empowerment of
Dalits and minorities. Speaking after BJP leader LK Advani, who also
endorsed Mayawati's suggestions, Singh said that poor children from
economically backward sections among the forward communities should
also be supported.

The party has refused to take a stand on whether or not the Gurjars
should be brought into the ST list and has been publicly maintaining
that there needs to be a wider consultation between all parties on the
issue. Moreover, the UPA government's OBC quota gambit has failed to
bring any tangible benefits for the party in the just-concluded UP
elections. The Congress-led Centre is now involved in fighting the OBC
quota issue in the Supreme Court — something that has made its
southern allies such as the DMK and PMK nervous given their large OBC
constituencies.


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