15 point Programme for minoritiesPrime Minister’s New 15 point Programme for minorities is a programme launched by Indian government for welfare of religious minorities in furtherance of reports by committees such as the Sachar Committee Report[1] that highlighted that minorities, especially Muslims, in the country were often in a worse socio-economic and political condition than communities such as the Scheduled Casts and Scheduled tribes communities that have been oppressed over millennia through the caste system (also referred to as the varna system). It pegged the status of minorities on various indicators such as nutrition, health, education et al. of minorities and specially Muslims at an abysmally poor level. The 15 point program was the government's response to these finding by laying down guidelines to target minorities in schemes and entitlements that are already in place and designing and executing new schemes aimed at the empowerment of these groups. [2][3] The programme advocated allocating 15% of plan outlays of welfare schemes identified under the 15 point programme. Mainly, issues of education, credit, housing, employment and communal harmony fall under its ambit.[4] 15 Points
Three more schemes were introduced into the 15 point programme for minorities in 2009 namely:[5]
Certain state governments have opposed the allocation of resources based on religion and called it communal budgeting and a ploy to divide society on religious lines.[citation needed] ImplementationThe 15 point programme has been criticized for slow progress and lack of proper monitoring. The implementation of several schemes slowed down while many were closed after the BJP was ruled into power in 2014. A social organization, Khudai Khidmatgar, conducted a public audit of the programme in Malda, Meerut and Murshidabad and found that even educated people were not aware of the various minority schemes.[6][7] References
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