
- Maratha protesters led by Manoj Jarange occupy Azad Maidan causing traffic disruptions in south Mumbai
- Jarange begins water strike on fourth day of hunger strike demanding OBC quota for Marathas
- Traders express concern over agitation’s impact on south Mumbai businesses and sales
With Maratha protesters led by Manoj Jarange occupying Azad Maidan and various areas in south Mumbai, police have cautioned motorists about occasional disruptions in traffic movement towards south Mumbai on Monday morning.
"Azad Maidan: Expect slow traffic and occasional disruption tomorrow morning while commuting towards south Mumbai due to ongoing agitation. Keep following directions given at traffic junctions to minimise," the Mumbai traffic police posted on its official handle.
Expect slow traffic and occasional disruption tomorrow morning while commuting towards south Mumbai due to ongoing agitation. Keep following directions given at traffic junctions to minimise inconvenience.#MTPTrafficUpdate
— Mumbai Traffic Police (@MTPHereToHelp) August 31, 2025
Police issued the advisory after Jarange vowed to stop drinking water from the fourth day of his hunger strike on Monday and brave "bullets" for reservation under the OBC category, demanding that the state government issue a GR based on the reservation based on available records.
Jarange has demanded the government issue a GR based on the reservation based on available records.
For its part, the Maharashtra government on Sunday said it will seek a legal opinion on implementing the Hyderabad gazetteer on the Kunbi status- an OBC caste- for the Maratha community.
Jarange, however, remained unimpressed and said he won't budge from the protest venue at Azad Maidan in south Mumbai till his demands are met, even if the Devendra Fadnavis government fires bullets at protesters.
He has been staging an indefinite hunger strike at the Azad Maidan from Friday over his demand for a 10 per cent quota for Marathas under the OBC category.
Asserting he will not leave Mumbai till his demands are met, Jarange on Sunday said, "The government has records of 58 lakh Marathas as Kunbis." "From tomorrow (Monday), I will stop taking water as the government is not accepting the demands. But I am not going back till the quota demand is met. We will get the reservation for Marathas under the OBC category no matter what," the activist told his supporters.
"The government should say that Marathas are a sub-caste of Kunbis. There are 58 lakh records that have been found, which show links of Marathas as Kunbis. Those who want a reservation will take it. Don't generalise Marathas as Kunbis if there is a legal issue," Jarange told a press conference on Sunday night.
No one can stop Marathas from getting reservation under the OBC category, he claimed.
Meanwhile, traders have also raised concerns over the ongoing Maratha agitation and sought intervention by the government or the High Court to restore normalcy and protect businesses in south Mumbai from long-term damage.
Federation of Retail Traders Welfare Association president Viren Shah said the massive gathering at Azad Maidan has thrown south Mumbai into complete chaos and affected weekend sales across shops and markets.
"Mumbai feels hijacked," he said.
Forced to do a political tightrope ahead of civic elections, the government said the cabinet sub-committee will seek a legal view on implementing the Hyderabad gazetteer regarding the Kunbi status for Marathas, which was a key demand of Jarange.
State minister Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil, who heads the cabinet sub-committee on the Maratha reservation issue, chaired two meetings here on the quota issue on Sunday.
Addressing media persons after the sub-committee meeting, Vikhe Patil said Advocate General Biren Saraf and retired HC judge Sandeep Shinde told the panel that they would require time to study whether the Hyderabad and Satara gazetteers can be implemented as demanded by Jarange.
"I will meet Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and apprise him of the deliberations the sub-committee had. There is a Supreme Court observation regarding the recognition of Marathas as Kunbis. We cannot override the SC observations (that Marathas and Kunbis are not the same). We are open to discussions as a solution needs to be found," he said.
As political charges flew thick and fast, Maratha protesters blocked the car of NCP (SP) MP Supriya Sule after she met Jarange at his protest venue on Sunday, and raised slogans against party head Sharad Pawar.
Sule demanded the Maharashtra government convene a special session of the state legislature and an all-party meeting to resolve the vexed Maratha reservation issue.
Meanwhile, the TV Journalists Association has complained to Jarange after some of his supporters allegedly misbehaved with women reporters at Azad Maidan.
The journalists' body also made it clear that if such incidents continued, the media would boycott the agitation On Sunday, leaders of the ruling Mahayuti and the Opposition traded barbs over the quota issue.
BJP leaders lashed out at NCP (SP) chief Sharad Pawar, a day after he said a constitutional amendment was necessary to lift the "52 per cent ceiling" on quotas placed by the Supreme Court.
Opposing the dilution of the OBC quota, NCP minister Chhagan Bhujbal has convened a meeting of OBC leaders.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
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