Patna High Court Puts Interim Stay on Bihar’s Caste Census

“Prima facie, we are of the opinion that the State has no power to carry out a caste-based survey, in the manner in which it is fashioned now, which would amount to a census,” the bench said.

New Delhi: The Patna high court has put an interim stay on the caste census being conducted by the Bihar government. A bench of Chief Justice K. Vinod Chandran and Justice Madhuresh Prasad was hearing three pleas filed against the exercise.

The Nitish Kumar government had launched a caste census in Bihar in January this year, and said that detailed information on socio-economic conditions would help create better government policy to aid disadvantaged groups.

One of the petitioners, Youth for Equality, had said in its petition that only the Union government can undertake a ‘census’ door-to-door survey exercise. Last week, the Supreme Court had asked the Patna high court to decide on Youth for Equality’s interim application as soon as possible, preferably within three days of it being placed in front of the chief justice.

The high court appeared to agree with the petitioner’s claim, saying that prima facie the survey appeared to be a census exercise. The bench said, according to Livelaw:

“Prima facie, we are of the opinion that the State has no power to carry out a caste-based survey, in the manner in which it is fashioned now, which would amount to a census, thus impinging upon the legislative power of the Union Parliament.

“We also see from the notification issued that the Government intends to share data with the leaders of different parties of the State Assembly, the ruling party and opposition party which is also a matter of great concern.”

The caste census has become a major political concern in recent months, with opposition parties amping up the pressure on the Union government to do the exercise on a national basis. It was the Congress-led UPA government which first conducted a Socio-Economic and Caste Census (SECC) in 2011-12 but never released its data because of varied opinions about it within the government.

As The Wire has reported, the demand for a caste census was more vocally expressed by different opposition parties after the Narendra Modi government implemented reservation for the Economically Weaker Classes (EWS), which effectively gave a quota to the so-called “upper caste” groups. The EWS reservation was seen as an anomaly in the caste-based affirmative action policy because the criteria was poverty, and was perceived by various parties as a move to deny marginalised castes and communities their rights.

The high court will hear the matter again on July 3.

Nitish, NDTV reported, has expressed frustration with those criticising the survey, saying that it would greatly aid the policy-making process.