The National Commission for Minorities (NCM) – an organisation established to safeguard the constitutional and legal rights of minorities and which was once headed by Hamid Ansari, now the Vice President – currently has no chairperson.
Minority Affairs Minister Mukhtar Abbas Naqvi, when asked about the reconstitution of the panel, said that it may happen soon.
“The process is on. We have received a few names for the members and chairperson which I cannot disclose right now, but it may be done soon,” Naqvi said.
The NCM has a sanctioned strength of seven members, including the chairperson, with each member having a fixed tenure of three years.
Currently, only one member, Dadi E Mistry, is in the Commission and he too is slated to retire on March 9.
Earlier, members Farida Abdulla Khan retired in October last year while Praveen Davar retired in January this year. Another member, Mabel Rebello, from the Christian community, completed her term in February 2016.
The government did not appoint any new persons to replace the outgoing members.
"I wrote twice to the government about the vacant posts, once during the tenure of Najma Heptulla and once to the present Minority Affairs Minister Mr Naqvi, besides taking this up verbally with the ministers now and then. Both the ministers said the matter was being considered, but no new members were ever appointed," Naseem said.
The Ministry felt that to preserve secular traditions and to promote national integration, "effective institutional arrangements are urgently required for the enforcement and implementation of all the safeguards provided for the minorities in the Constitution".
The government set up the NCM under the National Commission for Minorities Act, 1992, though it had to face different pulls and pressures, which is a separate story.
The body, which enjoys quasi-judicial powers, draws members from five recognised minority communities in India – Muslims, Sikhs, Christians, Buddhists and Parsis. Since January 2014, Jains have also been notified as a recognised minority community.
Naseem Ahmed, who is also a former IAS officer and has decades of experience working in the government set-up, said the Minorities Commission is a necessity and it must work at its full strength at all times.
"In the last two years, as members kept retiring and no new members came, the workload kept increasing on the serving members. For the Commission to discharge its duties efficiently, it must work at full strength," Ahmed said. He added:
He also advocated the need for the NCM to have an investigation wing with police officers, which other Commissions such as National Commissions for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes have.
However, Ahmed denied any direct interference by the government in the working of the NCM.
"There has never been any interference by the government, neither the previous one nor this one, in our affairs or functioning. We got equal cooperation from this government as with the previous one," Ahmed said.
(Mohd Asim Khan can be contacted at mohd.a@ians.in)
(The article has been published in arrangement with IANS)
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