This Article is From Nov 15, 2014

Maharashtra Government to Move Supreme Court Against Stay on Maratha Reservation

Maharashtra Government to Move Supreme Court Against Stay on Maratha Reservation

FILE photo: Bombay High Court

Mumbai: The Maharashtra government today decided to approach the Supreme Court after Bombay High Court stayed the move to grant 16 per cent reservation to Marathas in public service and educational institutions in the state.

The decision was taken at an all-party meeting chaired by Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis in Mumbai.

"The state government today assured us that it will approach Supreme Court against the interim ruling of the High Court," Shiv Sangram leader Vinayak Mete told reporters after the meeting.

"The government will approach Supreme Court next week," he added.


Former Congress minister Naseem Khan who, too, attended the meeting, said, "The government will constitute an all-party committee on the issue of reservations for Marathas and Muslims."

"The state government is fully supportive of the Maratha quota. We will appeal in Supreme Court on the High Court ruling. We will take measures to ensure that the quota remains," Mr Fadnavis said yesterday, reacting to the High Court ruling.

"If the court has pointed out any discrepancy in the law, we will remove any lacunae in it during the winter session of the state legislature in Nagpur," the chief minister had said.

The high court yesterday stayed the implementation of the controversial decision of the erstwhile Congress-NCP government in Maharashtra to provide 16 per cent reservation to Marathas in government jobs and educational institutions announced ahead of the Assembly poll.

The court also stayed the decision to provide five per cent reservation to Muslims in government service but allowed quotas for them in educational institutions, citing "abysmally low" educational achievements and the need to draw the community into the "mainstream of secular education".
 
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