http://timesofindia
 
 Chorus for caste-based census within Cabinet
 Subodh Ghildiyal, TNN, May 5, 2010, 03.06am IST
 
 NEW DELHI: The demand for restoration of caste-based census got a
 solid boost on Tuesday, with members of the Union Cabinet making a
 forceful pitch for the enumeration of OBCs nationally.
 
 A decision on the issue was deferred as Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
 stressed detailed discussions, and there are indications that
 inclusion of caste as one of the criteria for the census may not be
 possible for the exercise that is already underway.
 
 But Tuesday's brainstorming was marked by a very strong push for
 revival of caste-based census that was done away with after
 Independence. There was opposition too, but it was not so vigorous,
 with home minister P Chidambaram, one of the main opponents, citing
 logistical constraints rather than ideological considerations that led
 the founding fathers to scrap the caste count.
 
 The remark of a Cabinet minister -- "it is an open issue" -- was
 itself a testament to the success of the OBC establishment in
 reopening what was once seen as an issue settled forever.
 
 Even Chidambaram said that if deemed necessary, a caste count could be
 handled by some other agency like the National Commission for Backward
 Classes rather than being made a part of the decennial census.
 
 Commerce minister Anand Sharma cautioned against repercussions of
 reviving caste-based census that was "discontinued 70 years ago".
 Social welfare minister Mukul Wasnik was another voice of opposition.
 
 Those who argued strongly for the return of caste census included OBC
 faces such as law minister Veerappa Moily, minister for overseas
 affairs Vayalar Ravi, telecom minister A Raja and fertilizer minister
 Alagiri. Their arguments were boosted by the backing of finance
 minister Pranab Mukherjee. Urban development minister S Jaipal Reddy
 was also vociferous in supporting the demand.
 
 The development coincides with the strong demand in Parliament for
 revival of caste census. On Monday, BJP and Left had joined OBC
 leaders Mulayam Singh, Lalu Prasad and Sharad Yadav to demand that
 caste be brought back as a count criterion.
 
 The developments in the Cabinet may provide a fillip to the advocacy
 for caste-based census when Lok Sabha discusses it on Wednesday.
 
 Within the government, law minister Moily has been in the forefront of
 the pro-caste census move. Moily, as reported by TOI on September 15,
 had written to the PM demanding that the ban on caste enumeration be
 done away with. In the current instance, the law minister backed the
 idea, saying that with so many development schemes being designed
 around caste, the country needed "master data" on the "social reality
 that cannot be wished away".
 
 The home ministry, in its response, said inclusion of caste in the
 current census may not be possible because enumeration had already
 rolled out. It also pointed to the larger problem of counting people
 on the basis of caste, because of migration and because those who are
 "backward" in one state may not be so in another.
 
 Chidambaram, however, failed to convince the backers of census who
 said only the decennial census could meet the challenge of identifying
 the caste of 100 crore people.
 
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