The draft Bill on reservation to Jats and four other castes -- Jat Sikhs, Rors, Bishnois and Tyagis -- was cleared at a Cabinet meeting under the chairmanship of Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar here, official sources said.
The Bill, which proposes reservation for Jats and four other castes by creating a new classification in the Backward Classes category, is likely to be tabled in the ongoing Budget session of the state Assembly, which is scheduled to end on March 31, the sources said.
It has proposed 6 per cent reservation for Jats and the four other castes in Class-I and Class-II jobs, sources said.
Apart from giving reservation to Jats, Haryana government has also proposed to bring a separate Bill for the setting up of a permanent Haryana Backward Classes Commission, they said.
This was the first step in meeting the demands of Jats who carried out violent protests in Haryana last month and have threatened to resume the stir if the quota law is not made by April 3.
Jat leaders have been demanding reservation in the existing Backward Classes (BC) category.
The BC quota is bifurcated into two -- BC-A and BC-B -- having 16 and 11 per cent reservation, respectively.
Jats had last month launched a stir demanding reservation in BC category. The agitation, which had taken a violent turn, left 30 people dead and 320 persons injured and resulted in huge damage to property.
"We want that whatever Bill is tabled should be legally tenable," All India Jat Aarakshan Sangharsh Samiti President Yashpal Malik had said.
(Reopen DEL37)
Later, Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar said, "We have promised that we will bring the Bill in the ongoing session and there are still three days left (before the session ends). Therefore, it can be in the list of business any day."
He was responding to questions as to why the Bill was not tabled in the Assembly today itself as the Cabinet had cleared it.
When asked to comment on what happened in the Cabinet meeting, he said, "we have discussed every issue."
Official sources said the Bill was held back because of some technicalities.
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