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11/07/2010 Most MPs against women's bill: Sharad Yadav   New Delhi, July 11 (IANS) Continuing his opposition to the   Women's Reservation Bill, Janata Dal-United (JD-U) president Sharad Yadav says   that 90 percent of MPs are against the bill that seeks to set aside a third of   all seats in India's legislatures for women.
 "If there is no party whip, 90 percent of the MPs will   oppose the bill, whether they are from the UPA (United Progressive Alliance) or   the NDA (National Democratic Alliance), whether they are from backward classes   or upper castes, whether they are male or women MPs," Yadav claimed in an   interview. 
 Will the women's bill, passed by the Rajya Sabha on March 9,   be introduced in the Lok Sabha?
 
 "You may ask that question to the UPA   managers. It will face stiffer opposition in the Lok Sabha from us and   like-minded parties such as the Samajwadi Party and the Rashtriya Janata Dal   (RJD)," Yadav told IANS.
 
 "And I can tell you the bill will fall flat if   there is no whip," said Yadav, 63, a seventh-time Lok Sabha MP and convenor of   the NDA that is led by the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
 
 Differences had   surfaced in the JD-U when the women's bill was passed in the Rajya Sabha.
 
 While most of the seven JD-U Rajya Sabha MPs supported the bill, the 20   party MPs in the Lok Sabha led by Yadav opposed it. JD-U leader and Bihar Chief   Minister Nitish Kumar supported it, saying the legislation was one whose time   had come.
 
 Sharad Yadav joined the other Yadav duo - Samajwadi's Mulayam   Singh Yadav and RJD's Lalu Prasad - to protest against the bill in the Lok   Sabha. They received the indirect support of Mamata Banerjee's Trinamool   Congress, whose two MPs abstained from the voting, in the Rajya Sabha although   the party is a member of the Congress-led UPA alliance.
 
 The bill, which   provides for 33 percent reservation for women in the Lok Sabha and state   assemblies, was passed with an overwhelming majority in the Rajya Sabha. The   BJP, other constituents of the NDA and the Left supported it.
 
 The bill   is yet to be introduced in the Lok Sabha.
 
 As the Yadav trio and their   supporters staged noisy protests in the Lok Sabha, Leader of the House Pranab   Mukherjee stated that the bill would be introduced only "after wider   consultations" with all parties.
 
 The JD-U and other parties want a   sub-quota for women from other backward classes (OBCs) and minorities in the   seats reserved for women.
 
 According to Yadav, the bill in the present   form will benefit only "a few elite women from the metros".
 
 "It has only   the support of some vocal Delhi-based NGOs. Not even from other cities," he   said.
 
 Then why are the Congress, the BJP and other parties supporting   it?
 
 "Let all parties allow a free discussion and withdraw the whip. The   frank opinion of the MPs and the cadres will be heard then," the JD-U leader   said.
 
 Yadav said the differences over the bill was not a major obstacle   in his alliance with the BJP in Bihar.
 
 "You may not agree on all issues   in an alliance. Similarly, Nitish might not have personally agreed to opposing   the bill. But we are all united in the JD-U and the NDA."
 
 Then why did   the JD-U members support the bill in the Rajya Sabha?
 
 "Sometimes, as a   party, you may have to make some tactical moves. But I can tell you that all our   MPs in the Lok Sabha are united in opposing the bill."
 
 If the JD-U is   for reservations for women from OBCs and minorities, will it nominate women from   those sections in the coming elections to the Bihar assembly?
 
 "We have   been trying to empower women. But the selection of candidates depends on their   winnability too," Yadav said.
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