SC rules against keeping reserved seats vacant
The apex court also held that cut-off marks for backward category students
must not be relaxed beyond 10 per cent that of general category students

Published on 10/14/2008 6:31:09 PM


*New Delhi: *The Supreme Court on Tuesday held that the seats reserved for
backward category students in the state-run higher educational institutions
but left vacant due to their paucity must be diverted to the general
category students every year.

A five-judge constitutional bench headed by Chief Justice KG Balakrishnan
also held that the cut-off marks for admission for backward category
students in a state-run educational institution of higher learning must not
be relaxed beyond 10 per cent of the cut-off marks for general category
students.

It also ordered the government to fill the seats, reserved for backward
category students in higher educational institutions like the Indian
Institutes of Technology (IITs) and the Indian Institutes of Management
(IIMs) but left vacant owing to their paucity this year, with general
category students by October 30 this year.

The bench, which also included Justices Arijit Pasayat, CK Thakkar, RV
Raveendran and Dalveer Bhandari gave the ruling on a lawsuit seeking
clarification of its April 10 verdict, which upheld the law for 27 per cent
quota for backward category students in state-run institutions of higher
learning, reports IANS.

The plea had sought clarification on two counts—whether the seats in higher
educational institutions, reserved for backward category students but left
vacant due to their paucity, could be allocated to general category
students.

It also sought clarification on whether the cut-off marks for admission for
the backward category students could be relaxed beyond 10 percent of the
cut-off marks for general category students.

The plea was made by various academicians in three high courts of Mumbai,
Bangalore and Kolkata. The apex court subsequently had transferred the plea
to itself on a petition by the central government.

The bench gave its ruling following a brief argument by Attorney General
Goolam E Vahanvati and petitioners' counsel KK Venugopal on the issue,
during which the bench repeatedly disapproved the government's stand to keep
the seats vacant.

The government wanted institutions, increasing their seats in staggered
manner, to keep them vacant at least for three years.

But the bench rejected the idea saying it would be a waste of national
resources.

"You have created infrastructure for it (the enhanced number of backward
category students). You have appointed faculty for them and then you want
them to go waste," Bhandari remarked.

"Then the very purpose of our saying (in the April 10 ruling) that no seat
goes vacant is frustrated," Pasayat observed.

OR Read in the link
http://www.igovernment.in/site/SC-rules-against-keeping-reserved-seats-vacant/

Dr.V.N.Sharma

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