Gurugram: 25-year-old fashion designer jumps to his death from 14th floor - The deceased was identified as Charu Khurana, a native of Karnal in Haryana.
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Haryana’s New Nativist Law Violates India’s Constitution
The fundamental rights the law violates are guaranteed under Part III of the Constitution and include the right to equality, the right against discrimination in employment and the right to carry on any business or trade.
Chaaru Gupta 12 July 2021, Last Updated at 7:17 am Representational image outlookindia.com 2021-07-12T07:17:34+05:30
A new Haryana law that reserves 75% of jobs in private companies for residents of the state violates a raft of fundamental rights, a key Supreme Court order on reservations, was passed without authority by the state government and threatens business prospects in its premier start-up hub, Gurugram.
The legislation of the Bharatiya Janata Party-led Haryana government to reserve 75% of new jobs with monthly salaries of below `50,000 for local candidates, in all private establishments employing 10 or more persons, once again brings to the fore issues regarding the constitutional validity of such reservations and also their implications for the economy and polity. Though, since the early 1960s reservation for local candidates in employment has been a recurring demand in some of the more developed states; the issue once again is slowly gaining momentum with more states, including less developed ones, resorting to such moves.
Various provisions of the Constitution not only guarantee free movement and settlement of citizens in all regions of the country but also prohibit any discrimination on the basis of place of birth, or any other grounds. In fact, the Public Employment (Requirement as to Residence) Act, 1957 even repeals all legal provisions that prescribed residence requir
A Truly Anti-India Toolkit
Indrajit Hazra is Editor Views, Economic Times. His attempt to comment on everything under the sun has made him a social menace in certain social media circles.
‘Bengal wants its daughter only’ (Bangla nijer meykei chay) is the latest Trinamool Congress (TMC) election jingle being pumped into phones in the state. It’s certainly straight out of the central government’s ‘Vocal for Local’ toolkit. Pitted against the ‘India-Made Foreign Leader’ charms of Narendra Modi is Mamata Banerjee’s ‘Make in Bengal’ appeal. But for all its parochial parade, the Bengal government has not announced a policy that seems to be the rage among many states these days: reservation of jobs in the private sector for ‘locals’.