Bihar: "Will discuss data of caste survey during assembly session," says CM Nitish Kumar
Oct 11, 2023
Patna (Bihar) [India], October 11 : Amid the political uproar over the caste census in Bihar, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar on Wednesday said that the data of the caste survey will be discussed after the commencement of the Assembly Session.
While speaking to the media in Patna, Chief Minister Kumar made a reference to the state's caste survey and said, "What we have done is being discussed in other states as well. Once the (house) Assembly session begins, we will put forth all the data, including economic conditions of each family of every caste".
Earlier in the day, Nitish Kumar and Deputy CM Tejashwi Yadav, along with party leaders, attended an event in Patna to pay tributes to political activist Jayaprakash Narayan on his birth anniversary.
Last week, the National President of the Rashtriya Lok Janata Dal Upendra Khushwaha, criticized the caste-based survey report released by the Nitish Kumar government, describing it as "entirely fabricated", adding that his party will raise its voice against this fake data.
Kushwaha further said that the caste census has been published with an eye on the upcoming Lok Sabha elections next year and announced to stage protests at every district headquarters in the state on October 11.
"We will raise our voice against this fake data," he told reporters on October 8 in Patna.
He said they have decided to stage a protest on October 11 at every district headquarters in the state and will organise a march outside 'Raj Bhavan' in Patna, on October 14.
"We feel that the government released the data in haste keeping in view the upcoming elections...The focus was only on elections, and political gains & not the benefits of the people. The data is completely false and fake," he alleged.
With the parties of the INDIA bloc welcoming the report on caste in Bihar, the chorus for nationwide caste-based data has grown.
The findings from Bihar, one of the country's politically significant states, have the potential to upend the country's politics, with demands being made for a similar nationwide census.
According to the data released on October 2, Scheduled Castes make up 19.65 per cent and the Scheduled Tribes 1.68 per cent of the population of the state.
The data also said that the Hindus comprise 81.99 per cent of the population, Muslims 17.7 per cent, Christians 0.05 per cent, Sikhs 0.01 per cent, Buddhists 0.08 per cent and other religions 0.12 per cent.
The data said that Yadavs, the OBC group to which Deputy Chief Minister Tejashwi Yadav belongs, is the largest and accounts for 14.27 per cent of the state's population.
Kushwaha and Kurmi's communities form 4.27 per cent and 2.87 per cent of the population, the caste survey said.
Bhumihars constitute 2.86 per cent of the population, Brahmins 3.66 per cent, Kurmis 2.87 per cent, and Musahars 3 per cent.
The numbers stand in contrast to the quantum of reservations, which is 27 per cent that the OBC population gets in government jobs and admissions to educational institutions.
The total population of Bihar is more than 13 crore.