Key Points

Karnataka CM Siddaramaiah argues that India cannot claim to be a true democracy unless marginalized communities like OBCs, SCs, and STs are genuinely heard. He accuses the BJP of systematically delaying progressive policies, including withholding the Kantharaj Commission report. The Congress leader demands a caste census and proportional representation in jobs and education. Siddaramaiah also criticizes the BJP's tokenism toward OBCs while allegedly weakening reservation policies.

Key Points: Siddaramaiah Says India Not True Democracy Without AHINDA Voices

  • Siddaramaiah accuses BJP of delaying Kantharaj report on backward classes
  • Highlights Karnataka's historic role in social justice since 1918
  • Demands caste census for proportional representation
  • Slams BJP for weakening OBC quotas in jobs and education
3 min read

India can't be true democracy if AHINDA are not heard: Siddaramaiah

Karnataka CM Siddaramaiah demands caste census and proportional representation, slams BJP for delaying social justice reforms for OBCs, SCs, STs.

"India cannot be a true democracy if OBCs, SCs, STs, and minorities are merely counted but not heard. – Siddaramaiah"

Bengaluru, July 16

Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Wednesday asserted that India can't remain a true democracy if the minorities and other marginalised communities, including Other Backward Classes (OBCs), Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs) are not heard.

"India cannot be a true democracy if OBCs, SCs, STs, and minorities -- the AHINDA communities -- are merely counted but not heard," Siddaramaiah said while addressing the AICC OBC council meet here, adding, "This is not just a fight for reservation. It is a fight for dignity, recognition, and real power for those historically denied it."

AHINDA is the Kannada acronym for Alpasankhyataru, Hindulidavaru, and Dalitaru (minorities, OBCs, SCs).

Apprising the gathering about Karnataka's fight for social justice, the CM mentioned reports presented by various committees, including the Kantharaj Committee in 2015, that surveyed 1.3 crore households. However, he said that the BJP withheld the report for four years.

"Karnataka has been a pioneer in the fight for social justice: Miller Committee in 1918, 75 per cent reservation in 1921, Havanur Commission (1975) laid the scientific foundation for backward class upliftment, OBC State Act in 1995, Kantharaj Commission in 2015, which surveyed 1.3 crore households. But BJP blocked or delayed every progressive step -- including withholding the Kantharaj report for 4 years," Siddaramaiah added.

He further highlighted the achievements of Congress on this issue at the national level, including the passage of the National Commission for Backward Classes Act of 1993, which he alleged was weakened by the BJP.

Talking about the Triple test, which the Karnataka CM said was designed to protect rights and not block them, Siddaramaiah said, "BJP used it as an excuse to stall OBC reservations in local bodies -- even when Congress had already conducted the required surveys in Karnataka."

Crediting OBCs for nation building through labour, the Karnataka CM stated that OBCs comprise 50 per cent of India's population, yet they receive only 22 per cent reservation in central government jobs.

"In elite institutions, dropout rates are high. Privatisation and lateral entries bypass reservations. Agnipath gives OBC youth only 4 years, no long-term future," he said, adding, "OBCs built this nation with their labour. But caste denied them learning, land, and leadership. It wasn't just exclusion -- it was erasure."

"We speak of a 'level playing field' in a society where the game was rigged at birth. What chance does a shepherd's son or a weaver's daughter have against someone born into generational privilege?" Siddaramaiah asked.

He demanded that the caste census be a constitutional necessity while asserting proportional representation based on population.

"Expand educational & economic support -- hostels, scholarships, skill centres, reservation in private sector, contracts, promotions. Build political consciousness among backward classes," the CM added.

Attacking the BJP and the Sangh Parivar, Siddaramaiah claimed that the BJP denies justice to the AHINDA while offering slogans like "Sabka Saath-Sabka Vikas".

"The Sangh Parivar has always been ideologically uncomfortable with reservations. They project token OBC faces, not to empower communities but to mask exclusion. Their discomfort is not political. It's structural," he said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While I agree with the sentiment, I wish politicians wouldn't use this issue just before elections. My SC father worked his whole life in a government job thanks to reservations, but today's youth need more than quotas - they need quality education first.
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Aditya G
The caste census is long overdue! How can we solve problems if we don't even have proper data? BJP's reluctance shows their true colors. Karnataka has always led in social justice - from Miller Committee to now.
M
Michael C
As an expat working in Bengaluru, I'm learning about India's complex social fabric. The CM makes valid points about structural inequality, but I wonder if reservations alone can fix centuries of discrimination? Maybe need more holistic solutions.
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Shreya B
"Game was rigged at birth" - such powerful words! My ST grandmother couldn't read, but fought to educate my mother. Today I'm an engineer. This is what social justice looks like. Reservation is not the problem - casteism is! #AHINDA
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Karthik V
Respectfully disagree with some points. While discrimination exists, perpetual reservation creates dependency. My OBC friends say they want equal opportunity, not lifelong crutches. Need sunset clause with proper implementation.
N
Nisha Z
The privatization angle is crucial! Corporates happily

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