‘The UPA
government considers Muslims fools’
An interview with former Sachar Committee member Abusaleh Shariff
BY TRITHESH NANDAN
Abusaleh Shariff, who is chief economist at the New
Delhi-based think tank National Council of Applied Economic Research,
served as member-secretary of the Sachar Committee, the prime
minister’s high-level committee appointed to prepare a report on the
‘Social, Economic and Educational Status of the Muslim Community of
India’. In an exclusive interview with Governance Now
five years after the committee submitted its report in November 2006,
Shariff is forthright in his criticism of the Congress-led United
Progressive Alliance (UPA) for ignoring the plight of the Muslim
community and doing little to implement the committee’s
recommendations.
Q: Nearly five years after
the Sachar Committee made its recommendations, what is the status of
Muslims in India now?
A: The Sachar Committee was a diagnostic tool.
What we found was that the rate of change [progress] among Muslims is
the lowest. It is positive for all communities. When other communities
are progressing like a rabbit, Muslims are going forward at the speed
of a tortoise. On one factor, that is, girls’ literacy among Muslims,
we found there was in fact a reversal.
But after five years, what has the government done?
The Sachar Committee wanted schools for Muslims but the human resource
development (HRD) ministry promoted madrassas. Who wanted madrassas
for Muslim children? The UPA government considers Muslims fools. The
government is fooling Muslims, promising that it would modernise the
madrassas. We told the government that only three per cent of Muslim
children go to madrassas, 97 per cent of them need [regular] schools.
The government has not taken the underlined message of
the Sachar Committee: to make Muslims part of the mainstream.
Q: The minority affairs
ministry was formed in 2006 to look after the conditions of
minorities. Is it serving the purpose?
A: The government again took a wrong step by
forming the ministry of minority affairs. Who wanted a special
ministry? The Sachar Committee never recommended it. Muslims are now
going to the minority affairs ministry for every small issue. If you
want access to loans, you have to go to banks… You want schools, you
have to go to the education department. What can the minority ministry
do? The creation of the minority ministry is just to ghettoise the
Muslims.
We don’t want Muslims to go to the minority ministry
for every single issue. Their rights and issues should be addressed by
the main departments and institutions, which are accessible to every
citizen of the country. [But] the HRD ministry has not written a
single word on what policies have been initiated to improve the school
enrolment of the Muslims. The lending to the minorities is mandated to
be proportional to their share in the population of the region, state
or district. At the all-India level the overall proportion is set to
be 15 per cent. We need loans from banks for Muslims. When the
minority groups complain, the government says they should go to the
National Minorities Development and Finance Corporation under the
ministry of minority affairs. Its fund is limited; the major funds are
with the banks. The government has created such organisations to make
a few Muslim groups happy. The main purpose of mainstreaming the
minority community gets lost. That is the frustration even five years
after the Sachar Committee. The government is doing the exactly
opposite thing.
The UPA government is doing identity politics, which
the BJP also criticises. The Muslim community will never get any
benefit from such identity politics. I don’t have any problem with the
Wakf Board and madrassas but I want universities to show that 15 per
cent of their students are Muslims. Dalits are getting better every
year [but] not the Muslims. The rate of change of Dalits is five per
cent but for Muslims it is just 0.6 per cent.
Q: So you doubt the
government’s intentions?
A: The Congress-led government has very good
policies but when it comes to addressing the issue of religious
differences, it is shying away from fulfilling its duty – the latest
being the non-implementation of the Sachar Committee recommendations.
What we are asking is to create a religious-minority space in a
democracy. It is a matter of educating the community, which the
government is not doing. The progress of minorities is important for
the development of the country. On the job front, the central
government fares the worst in giving jobs to Muslims, as found by the
Sachar Committee. Muslims constitute only three per cent [of those
employed] in the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee
Scheme. There are hardly any anganwadi (crčche) workers in the
Muslim-dominated centres.
Public space should be made accessible to every
citizen of the country, no matter what community they belong to. In a
democracy, social identity should not have any role in providing basic
access, identity, rights. This is my critique of the government. It is
a serious governance issue.
Q: Have you put your views
before the Planning Commission which has finalised the approach paper
for the 12th five-year plan?
A: There is a lacuna in the approach the Planning
Commission has taken. The philosophy of the Sachar Committee is that
whatever welfare activities you take up, you have to bring equity to
services. Secondly, allocate resources to different departments and
different programmes. Now you build up a mechanism to evaluate such
programmes in such a way that equity is reflected in the outcome
indicators. If you want this then you have to establish an equal
opportunity commission which will oversee government policies on
bringing equity. Also, there has to be a compilation of a diversity
index which will measure how diverse your programme will be. That is
what the Planning Commission has to incorporate.
For example, Muslims do not get the share [i.e. their
proportionate share in loans] in the public sector banks. The
government says that 14 per cent of it goes to the minorities. It is
not going to Muslims alone but to all minorities.
There is no elaboration of inclusive development. It
was there in the 11th five-year plan without any framework or
parameter. But the inclusiveness is still missing in government
documents.
Q: Do you favour a job quota
for Muslims?
A: The Sachar Committee did not take a stand on
reservation in jobs but looked at basic issues. There is a huge
deficit in higher studies. You have to push people to go to higher
levels. Something has to be done to increase the presence at the
higher level. How do you do it? You have to do it through
reservations. And you have to create an environment to go there. So
reservation is necessary in higher education and also because public
employment is awfully bad. The government has to increase job
opportunities.
Q: Do you personally favour
reservations?
A: Reservation is necessary to increase job
opportunities for Muslims in the government sector.
Q: Can you name some states
that have taken the right initiatives for Muslims?
A: I can talk about the worst.
Q: Tell us about the worst
performers.
A: West Bengal is the worst – even the current
government. The new chief minister, Mamata Banerjee, is following the
same old policies of the left. Others are Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra,
Gujarat and Bihar. In Bihar, under the Nitish Kumar government, we are
seeing some positive signals but I am still not very much convinced.
He is also toying along the same political lines – Urdu medium schools
for Muslims, which only leads to identity politics. In Uttar Pradesh,
the issue is in planning. The Muslims were not given space in
developmental activities.
Q: What went wrong in West
Bengal?
A: Communists are the worst for Muslims in terms
of governance. They said they would not talk about religion and they
did exactly that. A small group of people controlled power. Their
policy was not inclusive. But compared to Gujarat, all other states
have provided security.
Q: What went wrong in
Gujarat?
A: I don’t want to comment on Gujarat.
Q: Tell us about the states
which have done well.
A: Relatively better states are Kerala [though it
is bad in employment terms, it is doing well on other counts],
Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu.
Q: If you are asked to
suggest in brief how to improve the lot of Muslims, what would you
say?
A: It is very simple. The government has to
identify sectors, departments, ministries, that are working for the
masses. Ensure that those departments and ministries deliver services
proportionately [to communities]. I have said if you can increase the
participation of Muslims in panchayats, that alone can make a
substantial change. They are hardly in panchayats and hardly get
elected because panchayats are caste-based and dominant castes
generally get elected. Andhra Pradesh passed a law in 2006 that in
mandal panchayats, if [say] 14 members are elected, co-opt two
members from minorities. Now there are at least 3,000 Muslims in the
mandal panchayats in Andhra Pradesh.
Q: Has it improved the
general conditions of Muslims in the state?
A: I don’t know about this but grass-roots
involvement has increased among the minorities. Panchayat people know
what the programme is, what kind of implementation is needed. The
government should bring a law in the panchayats to co-opt the locally
defined minorities. They don’t have voting rights if they are co-opted
but it doesn’t matter. At least information sharing will take place.
The solution is not reservations but participation. Even if no Muslim
is an IAS (Indian Administrative Service) officer or minister, I don’t
care, but there should be more participation at the grass-roots level.
Q: The Centre for Equity
Studies and Centre for Budget and Governance Accountability have
appraised the government’s performance vis-ŕ-vis the Sachar
recommendations. Their findings were criticised by minority affairs
minister Salman Khurshid.
A: The Centre for Equity Studies has brought out
two things very clearly. It found that in the Muslim areas, they do
not have proper schools. And even if schools are there, they are not
run by the [Muslim] community. I have seen in Hyderabad, that a
Brahmin girl is running an anganwadi centre in a purely
Muslim-dominated area. She comes from 10 km away to run the centre
though the rules say it has to be run by a local person.
I told Delhi chief minister Sheila Dikshit that there
are 3,000 DTC (Delhi Transport Corporation) buses in the capital and
5,000 drivers: how many Muslims are drivers, as they are very
technically oriented? She was shocked to find there are just three per
cent Muslim drivers in the DTC. They are not included even as drivers
so where will they go? You have to give space to them. Give them
ownership.
(This article is excerpted from an interview published
on the Governance Now website on September 22, 2011.)
Courtesy: Governance Now;
http://governancenow.com
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