New Delhi: The Supreme Court will take up a plea seeking stay on the Maratha quota law in July. A plea has been filed in the top Court challenging the Bombay High Court's interim order, which refused to stay the Maratha quota law and allowed the community to provisionally avail the 10% reservation, subject to the result of the petitions challenging it.
A division bench comprising Justices KV Viswanathan and NK Singh Thursday allowed the listing of the plea on the week commencing July 14 (when the Supreme Court reopens after summer break). The plea was mentioned by a lawyer seeking urgent listing of the matter.
The counsel argued that the Bombay High Court refused to stay the Maratha reservation and allowed its operation on a provisional basis.
A three-judge bench of the High Court passed the order on June 11 allowing the Maratha community to avail 10% reservation in education and employment, subject to the final outcome of the petitions challenging the 2024 Maratha quota law. The High Court also proposed to hold special Saturday sittings to hear the challenge, pursuant to a Supreme Court direction to decide the matter expeditiously.
A division bench comprising Justices KV Viswanathan and NK Singh Thursday allowed the listing of the plea on the week commencing July 14 (when the Supreme Court reopens after summer break). The plea was mentioned by a lawyer seeking urgent listing of the matter.
The counsel argued that the Bombay High Court refused to stay the Maratha reservation and allowed its operation on a provisional basis.
A three-judge bench of the High Court passed the order on June 11 allowing the Maratha community to avail 10% reservation in education and employment, subject to the final outcome of the petitions challenging the 2024 Maratha quota law. The High Court also proposed to hold special Saturday sittings to hear the challenge, pursuant to a Supreme Court direction to decide the matter expeditiously.
You may also like
Mumbai News: Chandivali's Disputed Civic Structure Found Illegal As Fire NOC, IOD And CC Not Secured Before Construction
'We should have had a choice': Brain-dead pregnant woman in Georgia taken off life support after premature birth; baby weighs 1 Kg
EuroMillions winner who won £151m and the dark side of life-changing fortune
Seriously mundane task the late Queen Elizabeth II loved to do laid bare
Indore: Zoom Car Scam Unfolds; Rented Cars Mortgaged