Region: A third of the sky
Early May witnessed extraordinary scenes in India's Rajya Sabha, where women parliamentarians formed a protective cordon around Law Minister H R Bhardwaj as he tabled the 81st Constitutional Amendment, popularly known as the 'Women's Reservation Bill', which provides for a 33 percent quota for women in Parliament and state assemblies in India. Cutting across party lines, women MPs tugged and pulled, as they physically prevented Samajwadi Party members from tearing up the bill.
The melee in the Upper House is reflective of the virulent opposition to a women's quota, which has been hanging fire since 1996, when it was first introduced in the Lok Sabha. Thereafter, it had lapsed into oblivion until the ruling Congress-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA) revived the bill. With the Rashtriya Janata Dal's Lalu Prasad Yadav having relented, it is now the Samajwadi Party and the Janata Dal-United that have been carrying the flame of opposition to the bill, including with spurious demands of a 'quota within quota' for women belonging to the Other Backward Classes (OBC). It must be noted that these same parties have never demanded representation for OBC men, and also that there are already constitutional provisions in the bill for reservations for Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe candidates, thus making their claims of 'elitism' ring hollow.