A committee formed by the Union ministry of tribal affairs three years
ago to examine and recommend tribal status to 11 hill communities has
failed to make any practicable recommendations and has obliquely
referred the matter back to the Office of Registrar General of India
(ORGI), which had earlier turned down the demand.
The tribal
status demand is a burning issue in the hills and the Centre had formed
the committee in 2016 when Bengal was going to Assembly polls.
In
the past three years, the committee was reconstituted thrice and the
final report was compiled by a team headed by M.R. Tshering, joint
secretary, ministry of tribal affairs. The other two members of the
final committee were Soumendra Mohan Patnaik, vice-chancellor, Utkal
University, and Gopal Sadhwani, director in the ministry.
Bishal Rai, a resident of Teesta in Kalimpong, has obtained the report through a RTI query.
Some members of the 11 communities (Bhujel, Gurung, Mangar, Newar,
Jogi, Khas, Rai, Sunuwar, Thami, Yakka (Dewan) and Dhimal) had also
pleaded on grounds of “principle of equality” and stated that two Gorkha
communities, Tamang and Limboo, have already been granted the special
status in 2002 while the rest have been overlooked.
One of the
observations of the committee is that “in the absence of one of the
reports of ORGI, the committee is not in a position to process the
merits of the claim of the unequal treatment”.
The committee has
stated it received a 2014 report on the rejection of claims of instant
(11) communities only. “Report of ORGI of pertaining to acceptance of
claim of Tamang and Limboo communities which led to their inclusion in
2002 was not available before the committee.”
The committee has
also passed the buck to the ORGI. “The determination has to be done as
per the modalities of the government. ORGI is the competent authority to
determine if a community is as per its yardstick for listing as
Schedule Tribe,” the report states.
It adds: “This committee is not competent to comment on the criteria/yardstick of ORGI for inclusion/ exclusion of communities.”
The
committee states that the view of the government “needs to be taken
note of so that any stand taken is not contradictory to extant
government documents”. The ORGI has twice rejected the recommendation
made by the Bengal and Sikkim governments on this issue.
The
report adds that the argument on the “equality” issue needs to be
“addressed with due diligence” and area specification would also have to
be “considered with care”, given that Gorkhas reside in other parts of
the country, too.
An observer said: “The committee has left it to the Centre to decide as the ORGI reports to the Union home ministry.”
Bishal
Rai, however, stated: “The report is a clear indication that the issue
is not political as political parties try to paint during election time.
It is more of a technical issue and those pursing the issue, including
Darjeeling MP Raju Bista, should concentrate on the technical part of
the demand.”
https://www.telegraphindia.com
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