New definition being considered for minority districts

Govt considering lowering the population threshold for designating minority concentrated sistricts

PTI | March 31, 2010



The government is considering a drop in the cut-off percentage by population in designating a district as 'minority concentrated'.

Union minority affairs minister Salman Khurshid said on Wednesday that the government is considering a proposal to bring the threshold down to 15 percent of the population of such districts as opposed to the current 25 percent.

Khurshid said that the government also favoured a "fresh look" at the Supreme Court restriction on Government for notifying any community as national minority, in an indication that it wants inclusion of more communities in such a list.

Addressing a function here, the minister suggested that his ministry wanted to declare a district as 'minority concentrated district' even if it has 15 per cent of such population.

At present, any district should have 25 per cent minority population to make it eligible for being declared as 'minority concentrated district'.

"We hope one day we will be able to convince ourselves, our colleagues and our Prime Minister that we bring the level from 25 percent to 15 percent as a cut-off perhaps in the next plan," Khurshid said.

"If that happens another 40 to 45 districts would easily be added to the 90 'minority concentrated districts' that we have today," he said addressing a conference of state minority commissions where home minister P Chidambaram was the chief guest.

He said Rs 3,500 crore are to be spent on these 90 districts in the 11th five year plan of which Rs 2,500 crore have already been released.

Originally the plan was to have more than 100 districts for the scheme but some of them were cut-off from the list as they did not fulfil the criteria for it on development parameters, the minister said.

"There are many districts in the country, which have high percentage of minorities like in Kerala, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, which were not included in the the list of MCD because they are well above the national average on development parameter," he said.

Comments

 

Other News

When Nandini Satpathy told Biju Patnaik: ‘I’ll sit on the chair you are sitting on’

Nandini Satpathy: The Iron Lady of Orissa By Pallavi Rebbapragada Simon and Schuster India, 321 pages, Rs 765

Elections 2024: 1,351 candidates in fray for Phase 3

As many as 1,351 candidates from 12 states /UTs are contesting elections in Phase 3 of Lok Sabha Elections 2024. The number includes eight contesting candidates for the adjourned poll in 29-Betul (ST) PC of Madhya Pradesh. Additionally, one candidate from Surat PC in Gujarat has been elected unopp

2023-24 net direct tax collections exceed budget estimates by 7.40%

The provisional figures of direct tax collections for the financial year 2023-24 show that net collections are at Rs. 19.58 lakh crore, 17.70% more than Rs. 16.64 lakh crore in 2022-23. The Budget Estimates (BE) for Direct Tax revenue in the Union Budget for FY 2023-24 were fixed at Rs. 18.

‘World’s biggest festival of democracy’ begins

The much-awaited General Elections of 2024, billed as the world’s biggest festival of democracy, began on Friday with Phase 1 of polling in 102 Parliamentary Constituencies (the highest among all seven phases) in 21 States/ UTs and 92 Assembly Constituencies in the State Assembly Elections in Arunach

A sustainability warrior’s heartfelt stories of life’s fleeting moments

Fit In, Stand Out, Walk: Stories from a Pushed Away Hill By Shailini Sheth Amin Notion Press, Rs 399

What EU’s AI Act means for the world

The recent European Union (EU) policy on artificial intelligence (AI) will be a game-changer and likely to become the de-facto standard not only for the conduct of businesses but also for the way consumers think about AI tools. Governments across the globe have been grappling with the rapid rise of AI tool

Visionary Talk: Amitabh Gupta, Pune Police Commissioner with Kailashnath Adhikari, MD, Governance Now


Archives

Current Issue

Opinion

Facebook Twitter Google Plus Linkedin Subscribe Newsletter

Twitter