Women’s Reservation Bill: 18 parties support BRS leader Kavitha’s hunger strike day before her ED grill
Women’s Reservation Bill protest: The passage of Women’s Reservation Bill in Parliament in long-standing demand. For the first time, It was introduced in 2008, since the bill has been facing political apathy. Interestingly, no party openly opposes the bill still it is waiting for being materialized.
Women’s Reservation Bill: The Women’s Reservation Bill, after over a decade, is set to get a revival as BRS leader K Kavitha, with the support of 18 parties will hold hunger strike to press the demand for the passage of the crucial bill on Friday.
The bill, which seeks to reserve 33 per cent seats in Lok Sabha and all state legislative assemblies for women, was introduced in the Rajya Sabha in May 2008 and was referred to a standing committee.
In 2010, it was passed in the House and transmitted finally to the Lok Sabha. However, the bill lapsed with the 15th Lok Sabha.
Leaders to participate Dharna
AAP- Sanjay Singh and Chitra Sarwara, Shiv Sena- Delegation (Names yet to be announced), Akali Dal – Naresh Gujral, PDP- Anjum Javed Mirza, NC- Dr Shami Firdous, TMC- Sushmita Dev, JD-U- KC Tyagi, NCP- Dr Seema Malik, CPI-Narayana K, CPM-Sitaram Yechury, SP- Pooja Shukla, RJD- Shyam Rajak, MP Kapil Sibal, Advocate Prashant Bhushan
Addressing the media, Kavitha — the daughter of Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrashekar Rao — said the bill has been lying in cold storage since 2010 and the Modi government has a historic opportunity to get its passed in Parliament before 2024.
The hunger strike will be held by her NGO Bharat Jagriti, she said and added all political parties have been invited to join it. So far, 18 parties, including the CPI-M and the Shiv Sena, have confirmed their participation.
“About 500-600 members will sit on a hunger strike, but the attendance will be much more. More than 6,000 people and 18 political parties have confirmed their participation,” she said.
CPI-M leader Sitaram Yechury will inaugurate the programme at 10 am. Kavitha said Prime Minister Narendra Modi had promised in both 2014 and 2019 Lok Sabha polls that his government would bring this bill and that it was also part of the BJP’s election manifesto, she said.
None of the BJP leaders raised this issue and the Modi government has failed to get this bill passed in Parliament despite having a majority, she said, and added, “This is very saddening issue.” The world is progressing only by taking women on equal footing with men. This unfortunately has not happened in India.
“I want to urge PM, all political leaders and especially President Droupadi Murmu and request the Government of India that it still has an opportunity as two more Parliament sessions are there (before the next election for passage of this bill),” she said.
The Modi government, if it wishes, can get the Women’s Reservation Bill passed just like the Aadhaar Bill which was passed by it as a financial bill and by bypassing the Rajya Sabha, she added.
Further, Kavitha said that India is at 148th place among 193 countries in terms of women’s representation. There are only 78 women members out of 543 in Parliament, which is 14.4 per cent. Unfortunately, it is very less than the global average. In neighbouring Pakistan, there is 17 per cent reservation for women and their representation in Bangladesh is higher than India, she said.
Dharna & ED grill
Daughter of Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao, Kavitha, who has been summoned by the Enforcement Directorate in the Delhi liquor policy case, accused the Centre of diverting nation’s attention from real issues by targeting the opposition.
Hitting out at the probe agency, she said on March 2, she had announced her hunger strike to raise voice for women’s reservation and after that she got ED’s summon and it is not coincident.
(With PTI input)
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