J&K Reservation Report Awaits L-G Approval Amid Political Scrutiny

The Jammu and Kashmir government has submitted its cabinet sub-committee report on reservations to the council of ministers. This report now awaits final approval from the Lieutenant Governor before implementation. The existing reservation policy currently aligns with constitutional provisions and the Supreme Court's guidelines. The Omar Abdullah-led government formed this committee to recommend changes that would benefit open merit category candidates.

Key Points: J&K Cabinet Sub-Committee Reservation Report Finalization Process

  • Cabinet sub-committee submitted report after stakeholder consultations
  • Existing policy follows Supreme Court's 50% reservation ceiling
  • Report responds to queries from Sajad Lone and Shabir Kulley
  • Omar Abdullah government formed committee for reservation reforms
2 min read

J&K Cabinet's reservation report to be finalised after L-G's approval

J&K government submits reservation report to council of ministers, awaits Lt Governor approval. Existing policy aligns with Supreme Court's 50% ceiling rule from Indira Sawhney case.

"The report shall be finalised in due course of time after obtaining the requisite approval of the competent authority - J&K Minister"

Srinagar, Oct 30

J&K cabinet sub-committee report on reservations has been submitted to the council of ministers and will be finalised after approval from the Lt Governor, the legislative assembly was told on Thursday.

The Jammu and Kashmir Government on Thursday disclosed that the cabinet sub-committee on reservation has submitted its report to the council of ministers, and it shall be finalised in due course after obtaining requisite approval from the competent authority.

In its reply to a question submitted by Peoples Conference President Sajad Gani Lone and Independent MLA Shabir Kulley, the Minister in charge of the General Administration Department informed the Assembly that the cabinet sub-committee, after due deliberations and consultations with stakeholders, has submitted its report to the Council of Ministers.

The report shall be finalised in due course of time after obtaining the requisite approval of the competent authority, the minister said.

The Minister said that the existing reservation policy broadly aligns with constitutional provisions and judicial principles, including those laid down in the Indira Sawhney vs. Union of India (1992) judgment.

In Indira Sawhney versus Union of India judgment, the Supreme Court has held that reservations should ordinarily not exceed 50 per cent of the available vacancies.

"However, it is also clarified that this ceiling is not an absolute rule and may be relaxed in extraordinary circumstances, where exceptional circumstances and peculiar facts of a particular state or region justify such a department," the minister's reply reads.

The government, however, said that it does not maintain region-wise or district-wise details of selections for junior scale posts in the Jammu and Kashmir Administrative Service, Jammu and Kashmir Police (Gazetted) Service, and Jammu & Kashmir Accounts Service, saying it doesn't maintain such data.

After coming to power in October 2024, the Omar Abdullah-led government had formed a cabinet sub-committee to recommend changes in the existing reservation rules in J&K so that maximum opportunity is given to open merit category candidates in government jobs and professional colleges.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Why does every decision in J&K need L-G approval? When will we have true democratic processes? The people's representatives should have more say in such important matters.
S
Sarah B
As someone who has worked in government recruitment, I appreciate that they're following the Supreme Court guidelines on the 50% ceiling. This ensures constitutional compliance while addressing local needs.
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Arjun K
The government doesn't maintain region-wise data? How can they make informed decisions about reservations without proper data? This seems like a major oversight. 🤔
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Kavya N
Good to see the Omar Abdullah government taking initiative on this. Reservation should be about social justice, not political appeasement. Hope the final policy benefits the truly deserving sections.
M
Michael C
The mention of "extraordinary circumstances" for exceeding the 50% limit is interesting. J&K does have unique challenges that might justify special consideration. Balanced approach is key.

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