People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXX
No. 22 May 28, 2006 |
STATE
secretary of the CPI(M) Biman Basu has declared that reservation of seats for
students belonging to the backward sections must be done but with an attendant
increase of seats in higher education.
Biman
Basu noted that it was not at all desirable that a kind of cleavage developed
amongst students over the issue of reservation. Discussions across the table are
necessary to resolve the issue.
The
central government, said the CPI(M) leader, must speak to the Medical Council of
India (MCI) and discuss the issue of increasing the number of seats.
Such increase of seats is also necessary at the level of the states
should reservation be expected to be implemented without hassle.
Permission should be sought in general from such institutions as MCI,
AICTE, and UGC et al.
Biman
Basu also pointed out that since the number of people belonging to the Other
Backward Classes (OBC) was not the same, the reservation ratio could not be the
same all over the country.
Besides
increasing the number of seats, the budgetary allocation for higher education,
too, needed to be increased. However,
it was important, said Biman Basu, to take care that persons belonging to the
‘creamy layer’ were not allowed to take advantage of the reservation quota.
At the same time, it was important to assist economically disadvantaged
people even if they did not belong to the backward sections of society.
Biman
Basu was critical of the manner in which police had been deployed to break up
the anti-reservation movement of a section of the students in places like Delhi
and Mumbai. Lathicharges would not
solve the problem, commented Biman Basu who added to stress the importance of
dialogue.
Pointing to a new phenomenon among the students community over the issue of reservation, the CPI(M) leader noted that sections of students were being made the subject of derisive comments by other sections and he said that this was not all desirable and the central government must not do anything to escalate the situation beyond control. (B P)