Puppetry Artist Hails Women's Quota as Smart, Efficient Step for India

Puppetry artist Anupama Hoskere praised the Women's Reservation Bill, calling it a smart and efficient move aligned with modern values while rooted in India's historical tradition of women in leadership. Actor Dipika Chikhlia also backed the bill, praising Prime Minister Narendra Modi's initiative to empower women. Parliament will convene a special session on April 16 to take up the bill, which is part of a plan that may increase Lok Sabha seats to 816. The agenda includes amendments to the Nari Shakti Vandan Act and using the 2011 census for delimitation to reserve about 273 seats for women.

Key Points: Women's Reservation Bill Praised as Smart, Efficient Move

  • Bill praised as smart & efficient
  • Rooted in India's history of women leaders
  • Special Parliament session on April 16
  • Lok Sabha seats may increase to 816
2 min read

"Smart and efficient move": Puppetry artist Anupama Hoskere on Women's Reservation Bill

Artist Anupama Hoskere and actor Dipika Chikhlia praise the Women's Reservation Bill as a modern step rooted in India's tradition of female leadership.

"A balance of male and female energies will only strengthen peace, harmony, and prosperity. - Anupama Hoskere"

Bengaluru, April 7

Puppetry artist Anupama Hoskere praised the women's reservation bill, calling it a "smart and efficient" step by the government that aligns with the modern values of the world.

While talking to ANI, Hoskere highlighted India's historical tradition of women in leadership and governance, ultimately promoting greater balance, harmony, and prosperity.

"Very happy to know about the upcoming 33% reservation for women. It is a smart and efficient move, aligning with a modern world. This is not new for India--history shows women had roles in defence and administration, even ruling kingdoms when needed. So while rooted in tradition, it is a welcome and positive step. A balance of male and female energies will only strengthen peace, harmony, and prosperity," said Hoskere.

Union Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju announced that Parliament will convene a special session on April 16 to take up the Women's Reservation Bill.

Earlier, 'Ramayan' actor Dipika Chikhlia backed the Women's Reservation Bill, praising Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the initiative aimed at empowering women in India.

"All I can say is that it is very good because, you know, actually we are 50 per cent of our population. Women are 50 per cent of the population, and I don't see really anything wrong in trying to help and support and, you know, bring them up in the society," Chikhlia told ANI.

Chiklia praised PM Modi's initiative as a step toward inclusive representation. "I think Modiji is supporting a bill like this as a, for a reservation. It's primarily because I think women also need to come out more in the open, and I think it is absolutely very necessary for women to stand up, and I think this is a complete support to womanhood," she added

The government is planning to bring an amendment bill to increase the number of Lok Sabha seats to 816 from 543 seats. The idea is to have at least 273 seats reserved for women.

According to sources, the key agenda may include amendments to the 2023 Nari Shakti Vandan Act and the introduction of the Delimitation Commission Bill. The sources said that the Centre has planned to take the 2011 census as the basis for delimitation and seat redistribution.

Currently, the Lok Sabha has 543 seats. With a proposed 50 per cent increase, the number of seats will rise to 816, with 273 (about a third) reserved for women.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul R
While I support more women in Parliament, I hope the focus is on merit and capability, not just filling quotas. Reservation is a start, but we need systemic changes to encourage women from all backgrounds to enter politics.
S
Sarah B
Interesting to see the historical context being highlighted. It's not about importing Western ideas but reviving our own traditions of women in leadership. Smart framing.
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Aditya G
The increase in Lok Sabha seats is the bigger story here. 816 MPs? That's a massive change. Hope it doesn't just become more expensive for the exchequer without real productivity gains.
M
Meera T
As a woman from a small town, I feel hopeful. Maybe now issues that affect us directly - like safety, sanitation, and girls' education - will get more serious attention in the Lok Sabha. 🤞
K
Karthik V
Using the 2011 census for delimitation is problematic. The population has changed so much since then. This will create unfair representation for states that have controlled population growth. The process needs to be more current.

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