Context:
The Supreme Court reaffirmed that Scheduled Caste (SC) status is restricted to Hindus, Buddhists, and Sikhs, and conversion to other religions results in loss of such status.
Key Highlights:
- Constitutional & Legal Basis
- The judgment relies on Clause 3 of the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950.
- Initially limited to Hindus, later extended to:
- Sikhs (1956)
- Buddhists (1990)
- Case Background
- Appeal by Chinthada Anand, who converted to Christianity but claimed protection under the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989.
- Court rejected the claim due to religious disqualification.
- Interpretation of βProfessβ
- The term implies active declaration and practice of religion, not mere belief.
- Conversion must reflect genuine adherence.
- Conversion and SC Status
- Conversion to non-recognized religions (e.g., Christianity, Islam) leads to immediate loss of SC status.
- SC benefits cannot be claimed simultaneously with such religious identity.
- Re-conversion Conditions
- Requires:
- Proof of original caste identity
- Evidence of genuine reconversion
- Acceptance by original caste community
- Distinction with STs
- Scheduled Tribes (STs) do not have religion-based restrictions, unlike SCs.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Clause 3, Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950 β restricts SC status based on religion.
- SC status extended to:
- Hindus (1950)
- Sikhs (1956 Amendment)
- Buddhists (1990 Amendment)
- SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 β provides legal protection against caste-based discrimination.
- Reconversion principle β requires social acceptance, not just formal change.
- Difference: SC β religion-based restriction; ST β no such restriction.
Relevant Mains Points:
- Constitutional Debate & Social Justice
- Raises questions on link between caste and religion.
- Critics argue caste discrimination persists even after conversion.
- Equality vs Historical Context
- Article 14 (Equality) vs targeted benefits under Article 341.
- Policy rooted in historical caste oppression within Hindu social order.
- Legal and Ethical Issues
- Whether denial of SC status after conversion violates freedom of religion (Article 25).
- Balancing identity, discrimination, and affirmative action.
- Way Forward
- Re-examine SC criteria based on social discrimination rather than religion alone.
- Commission-based studies on caste discrimination across religions.
- Ensure uniform anti-discrimination protections irrespective of religion.
UPSC Relevance:
β’ GS 2: Polity β Constitutional provisions, Supreme Court judgments
β’ GS 2: Social Justice β Reservation policies, caste issues
β’ Prelims: SC Order 1950, amendments, legal provisions
