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SC rejects Centre’s plea to relax its order on Haj quota |
The Supreme Court on Friday rejected the government’s
request to defer its July 23 order, limiting government's discretionary quota
for Haj pilgrims till next year. A two- judge bench of Justice Aftab Alam and
Justice Ranjana Prakash Desai refused to oblige the Centre on its plea to defer
its order till next year. The government was represented by Attorney General G.
E. Vahanvati and counsel Harris Beran. Vahanvati made the submission at the fag
end of the hearing of a bunch of petitions by private tour operators (PTOs), who
have challenged certain norms fixed by the government for the operators. Earlier,
on July 23, the apex court had drastically reduced the government's discretionary
and dignitaries quota seats for Haj 2012 pilgrims to 300 from the proposed 5,050
seats, and had hoped they would be alloted on "reasonable basis". The court, on
Friday, maintained that there could be no monopolisation, and asked the Centre
to frame a fresh PTOs policy for Haj pilgrimage from next year onwards. "It shall
not be the monopoly of a few operators. We hope that the next Haj policy will
be framed keeping in view the concerns of this court," the bench observed. Agreeing
that the present policy was not fair, the apex court asked the AG to come out
with a new policy next year to facilitate "fresh players". "We know that the present
policy is not perfect. But we do not want to interfere with this years policy,"
Justice Alam observed. The bench, however, said there were lot of scopes for improvement
in the government's present policy by taking into consideration the suggestions
and complaints made by various tour operators who have been knocked out of the
business on account of certain norms prescribed by the government. As per the
government norms, only those PTOs who had annual turnover of Rs.1crore for the
year 2009 and 2010 were eligible for ferrying pilgrims. The apex court said it
will consider next year's Haj policy for private tour operators in November. The
apex court had on July 23 limited the number of seats to be allocated under dignitaries
quota by the President to 100, the Vice President to 75, the Prime Minister to
75 and the External Affairs Minister to 50. The bench had said 200 seats would
be reserved for the Haj Committee of India (HCOI) as against the proposed 500.
After limiting the seats under dignitaries quota and the HCOI, the bench had said
that remaining seats would go to the Haj committees of various states and union
territories.
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