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Court asks Govt. to assess BC population
By Our Legal Correspondent
HYDERABAD, DEC. 13. A Division Bench of the A.P. High Court
comprising Mr. Justice Motilal B. Naik and Mr. Justice A. Gopal
Reddy, on Wednesday directed the Government to conduct elections
to the posts of Sarpanch and ward member of Gram panchayats in
the State after ascertaining the percentage of voters belonging
to the Backwards Classes (BC).
The Bench was dealing with a batch of writ petitions filed by the
A.P. Sarpanches Association and others. The petitioners
challenged the validity of Article 243-D of the Constitution of
India, which gives discretion to the State Legislatures to fix
percentage of reservations for BCs in the Panchayat Raj
institutions.
The petitioners complained that the figures relating to the
percentage of BCs in the voters' lists were faulty. The
petitioners brought to the notice of the court the fact that the
State Government was pulled up by the Benches of the High Court
on earlier occasions for relying upon the figures arrived at the
A.P.B.C. Cooperative Finance Corporation. The method of lottery
to identify the reserved seats was also challenged. At the time
of admission of these writ petitions, the Bench had restrained
the State Election Commission from issuing an election
notification.
The Bench, speaking through Mr. Justice Motilal B.Naik in a 50-
page judgment, felt that the Government should make a fresh
effort to identify the BCs in the voters' lists. The Bench
brushed aside the challenge of the petitioners to the provisions
of the Constitution and the sections of the Panchayat Raj Act.
The Bench dealt at length the issue of lottery system to identify
the reserved seats. Mr. Justice Naik commented: ``It shall always
be remembered that reservations are made to fulfil the
aspirations of such sections of people where they can live in
dignity in a conducive political environment where they could
rule themselves. By making reservations either in favour of BC
or, for that matter, any other category through drawal of lots,
the object of reservations would be defeated.'' He declared that
``the constitutional scheme can not be made to appear a mere
ritual.''
The Bench took note of the fact that in some cases posts were
reserved for BCs where there was not a single person from that
community. The court said: ``We hold, providing reservations by
drawal of lots is not acceptable to a system by rule of law.''
Dealing with the sensitive issue of percentage of BC voters and
population, the Bench lamented that had the Government taken note
of the earlier judgments in this regard and acted effectively,
this issue would not have surfaced again. The Bench referred to a
full bench judgment of this High Court in 1987 and a judgment of
the five-judge Bench in 1995 wherein the action of the State
Government in relying upon the figures arrived by APBC Co-op
Finance Corporation was not appreciated. The Bench felt that
enumeration of BC population will consume at least four to five
years and felt that elections can not be postponed indefinitely.
The Bench took note of the fact that the State Government
informed the court that identification of BCs in the present
voters' lists will take three-and-a-half months. The court
directed the State Government to immediately take steps to
identify the BC voters from the existing voters' list of each
gram panchayat without regard to census.
The authorities were directed to identify the constituencies for
reservation as per descending order as stated in the rules. The
last date to intimate the State Election Commission about the
reserved constituencies etc. was fixed as 31.5.2001. The SEC then
should set the election process into motion, the Bench said.
The court clarified that just because a person was shown as BC in
the voters' list, it did not mean that the process mentioned in
the rules to claim reservation to contest in a reserved ward was
dispensed with completely.
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