DMK moves High Court against 10% quota for poor

Says it violates the Constitution

January 18, 2019 12:15 pm | Updated January 19, 2019 07:57 am IST - CHENNAI

R.S. Bharathi

R.S. Bharathi

DMK organising secretary R.S. Bharathi has filed a writ petition in the Madras High Court, challenging the legal validity of the recent amendment made to the Constitution granting 10% reservation in jobs and higher education admission for the economically weaker sections in the open competition category.

Senior counsel P. Wilson, representing the petitioner, mentioned the matter before a Division Bench of Justices S. Manikumar and Subramonium Prasad on Friday and the judges agreed to hear the case as and when the High Court Registry lists it before them for admission.

In his affidavit, Mr. Bharathi argued that caste-based discrimination had been plaguing Indian society for about three millenniums. He said the division on the basis of Jati or Varna was due to the contents of the Vedas, particularly the Rig Veda, which differentiates human beings on the basis of their profession.

The arbitrary division created between priests and teachers (Brahmins), warriors and rulers (Kshatriyas), farmers and traders (Vaishyas) and labourers (Shudras) had led to their segregation in all forms of life beginning from dietary habits to social life and caste began to determine the value of a human being, he said.

“The effect of this systemic discrimination was not just economic. It was social and psychological as well. Even if one person from the ‘lower’ caste became rich, he was not permitted to enter the social circles of the ‘upper’ castes… Thus, a parallel nation of untouchables was created,” his affidavit read.

Post-Independence, the Constitution abolished untouchability and reservation was provided for the oppressed and backward classes in education and public employment “to heal the wounds of centuries of discrimination and to uplift the social status of people belonging to these classes.”

Contrary to the intent behind providing reservation for the socially backward communities, the Centre had now enacted the Constitution (103rd Amendment) Act, 2019 enabling the State to make reservation based on the economic criterion alone which was unconstitutional and amounts to altering the basic structure of the Constitution.

“It is not an exaggeration to say that the Bill was foisted on the Lok Sabha,” Mr. Bharathi said and claimed it was rushed through without even providing copies of it to the members of the House in advance.

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