SC seeks AG’s help in plea for Minority status for Hindus in J&K, 7 others states

TNN Bureau. Updated: 7/20/2019 11:56:28 AM Front Page

JAMMU: Looking to make some strides on the long pending issue, the Supreme Court Friday sought assistance of Attorney General K K Venugopal in dealing with a plea seeking that minority communities be defined on the basis of state-wise population data instead of national data.
The court which was hearing a plea by a BJP leader challenging the validity of the Centre's 26-year-old notification declaring five communities -- Muslims, Christians, Sikhs, Buddhists and Parsis -- as minorities, and seeking minority status for Hindus in eight states, directed for supplying a copy of the petition to office of the attorney general and listed it for hearing after four weeks.
In eight States including Jammu and Kashmir, it is the Hindus which are minority in actual. As per 2011 census, Jammu and Kashmir has 28.44 percent Hindus against 68.30 percent Muslims.
A bench comprising Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justices Deepak Gupta and Aniruddha Bose took note of the submissions of senior advocate Mukul Rohatgi that the law which allows declaration of minority community on the basis of national data was illegal. The bench asked BJP leader and lawyer Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay, who has filed a PIL on the issue, to supply a copy of the petition to the office of the attorney general.


State Hindu Population
J&K 28.44 %
Lakshadweep 02.5 %
Mizoram 02.75 %
Nagaland 08.75 %
Meghalaya 11.53 %
Arunachal 29.00 %
Manipur 31.39 %
Punjab 38.40 %



The plea has sought to declare as unconstitutional section 2 (c) of the National Commission for Minority (NCM) Act, 1992, under which the notification was issued on October 23, 1993.
Upadhyay has sought direction for laying down guidelines to define the term 'minority', based on state-wise population of a community instead of the national average.
He has contended in the plea that the notification was violative of fundamental rights to health, education, shelter and livelihood.
The advocate said he was filing the public interest litigation (PIL) on the issue as he did not receive any response on his representation from the Home Ministry, the Ministry of Law and Justice and the National Commission for Minorities.
Upadhyay filed the fresh petition as the apex court on his petition on February 11 had asked him to approach the NCM, with the direction that it will decide within three months his representation which sought laying down of guidelines for defining the term 'minority' based on state-wise population of a community instead of the national average.
In his petition, the BJP leader has said Hindus, who are a majority community as per national data, are a minority in several north-eastern states and in Jammu and Kashmir.
However, the Hindu community is deprived of benefits which are available to the minority communities in these states, the plea has said, adding that NCM should reconsider the definition of minority in this context.
The definition of "minority" as per Article 29-30 has left leakages in the hands of state, which shall be misused and are being misused for political benefits, the petition said, adding that the minority status be granted to Hindus in states where the number of the community has decreased.
The plea has sought minority status for Hindus in seven states and one Union Territory where the number of the community has fallen, according to the Census 2011.
The other states in which Hindus are minority include Lakshadweep (2.5%), Mizoram (2.75 %), Nagaland (8.75 %), Meghalaya (11.53 %), Arunachal Pradesh (29 %), Manipur (31.39 %) and Punjab (38.40 %).
Christians are in majority in Mizoram, Meghalaya and Nagaland and there is significant population in Arunachal Pradesh, Goa, Kerala, Manipur, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal but they are treated as minority.
Likewise, Sikhs are a majority in Punjab and there is a significant population in Delhi, Chandigarh and Haryana but they are treated as a minority, it has said.
Muslims are a majority in Lakshadweep (96.20 %), and there is a significant population of the community in Assam (34.20 pc), West Bengal (27.5 pc), Kerala (26.60 pc), Uttar Pradesh (19.30 pc) and Bihar (18 pc).
“However, they are enjoying 'minority' status, and communities, which are real minorities, are not getting their legitimate share, jeopardizing their basic rights guaranteed under the Articles 14, 15, 19 and 21 of the Constitution,” the petition has said.


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