Darjeeling, July 14: The GTA Sabha has
passed a resolution in favour of reserving 22 per cent for Scheduled
Castes and 6 per cent for Scheduled Tribes in GTA jobs.
The executive
Sabha of the GTA, which passed the resolution yesterday, has also
decided to follow reservations in the GTA elections that would reflect
the 33.72 per cent presence of STs and the 9.82 per cent of SCs in the
hills.
The moves are
being seen as a way to woo SCs who had spoken out against the lack of
reservations for teachers’ jobs in the hills.
The hills also
have a sizeable tribal population. Among them are Lepchas, whom Trinamul
tried to woo after the state set up a Lepcha development board.
Roshan Giri, an
executive member of the GTA, used the word “reservation” yesterday while
talking about the hill election system but did not specify the quota
percentage for SCs and STs. “The GTA has passed a resolution to provide
seat reservations to SC and ST communities in the next GTA elections,”
Giri, a senior Gorkha Janmukti Morcha leader, said.
About GTA job
recruitments, he said: “The Sabha had also decided to maintain a
100-point roster system in all future appointments made by the GTA.”
According to the 100-point roster system, 22 per cent of jobs have to be
reserved for SCs and 6 per cent have to be set aside for STs. Members
of Other Backward Classes enjoy a reservation of 27 per cent.
Giri said the GTA
Act would have to be amended to reserve seats in the hill body, which
means the resolution would require the state government’s sanction.
The GTA has 45 elected members and five nominated ones. None of seats is reserved.
The resolution was adopted at a meeting of the executive body here yesterday.
The SC community
had criticised the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha for denying them their
constitutional rights while appointing 575 primary school teachers
recently. SC leaders had said 127 candidates from the community needed
to be appointed as the teachers, but only 80 had been given jobs. They
had threatened to approach the National Commission on Schedule Castes
with the matter.
The SC leaders couldn’t be contacted today for a reaction on the Gta’s resolution.
Observers believe
the GTA’s decision to pass a resolution on reservations in the hill
body’s seats as well as jobs was the fallout of the SC community’s
protest.
“This is a move
aimed at wooing the SC community. Moreover, the Morcha would be on the
back foot if they (the SC community) approach court or the National
Commission for Schedule Castes against the GTA for not following quota
in teachers’ recruitment,” said an observer.
The SC community,
led by Kamasingh Ramudamu, were among the first to support the Morcha in
2007 as the Sixth Schedule demand raised by GNLF leader Subash Ghisingh
did not have any provision for reserving seats for the SCs.
But for STs, there
was a provision to reserve 10 of the 28 elected seats of the council
proposed to be created under the Sixth Schedule.
Ramudamu was made the vice-president of the Morcha, a post he held till he died in 2009.
Many also believe the GTA decided to seek the seat reservation to curry favour with the Lepchas, who belong to the ST community.
Earlier this year,
the GTA and the state government were at loggerheads over the formation
fo a Lepcha development board. The Morcha wanted a Lecha development
board under the GTA, but the state government, after talks with Lepcha
leaders, set it up in February under the state government’s backward
classes welfare department.
The GTA executive
body also passed a resolution to demand ST status for 10 Gorkha
communities. “The 10 Gorkha communities are Rai, Gurung, Sunwar-Mukhia,
Khas-Hitkari, Bhujel, Newar, Dewan, Mangar, Thami and Jogi. The Centre
and state had agreed to pursue the demand in the memorandum of
agreement,” Giri said.
The Telegraph
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