Kerala Govt introduces 10% reservation for upper caste Hindus in Kerala temple Boards

NewsBharati    16-Nov-2017
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Bengaluru, November 16: Kerala government introduced 10% reservation for financially backward upper-caste Hindus in Kerala Temple Boards. Last month, it had asked temple boards to strictly follow quota norms for the SC-ST community as applied for any other government job, leading to the appointment of 36 Dalits as temple priests for the first time in Kerala. 

The Kerala government has introduced 10% reservation for financially backward upper-caste Hindus in appointments to the boards of five public-run bodies or Devaswom boards, which administer about 3,000 Hindu temples, as it recast job reservation norms.

Announcing the new norms at a press conference, Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan also supported reservations for economically backward upper-caste Hindus applicable in all government jobs, a sensitive topic which would require a consensus among major political parties across India and a Constitutional amendment to be implemented.

As a first step, Vijayan said, his government will implement such reservation in certain sectors where constitutional changes are not required, like the Devaswom boards.

Upper caste Hindu organizations such as the Nair Service Society have been demanding such reservations since the state was formed in 1957.

The new norms, introduced on Wednesday, will also lead to more backward caste Hindu community members entering temple administration, as the government has increased the quota for members of Other Backward Castes (OBC) and Scheduled Caste-Scheduled Tribe (SC-ST) communities—to 17% from 14% and to 12% from 10%, respectively.