
The National Reverse Class Commission (NCBC) submitted its annual reports for the period 2022-23 and 2023–24 to President Droubadim Murmu, the Ministry of Social Justice and authorization stated on Friday (May 30, 2025)
The news was the chairmen on Thursday (May 29, 2025) Chairman of the NCBC Hansraram Gangara Ahir and a member of the Bhuvan Bhushan Kamal Commission.
According to its constitutional mandate, the NCBC is obliged to submit these reports annually and review the implementation of guarantees for communities classified as other reverse classes (OVC). The Commission is also entitled to recommend measures that the Government of the Union and State should take for “protection, social and socio-economic development” of these communities.
While submission to the President is part of a regular process, the reports are only published after they are laid in parliament, accompanied by news (ATR) reports. The last news of the NCBC, which was laid in parliament, was her consolidated possession of the period 2019–2022.
The latest posts follow considerable delays. Officials familiar with this process explained that the compilation of these reports involves collecting data from different state governments, which often leads to delay. Furthermore, to submit messages in parliament dependent on the preparation of the atrium by different governments, thus increasing to time.
As Hindu informed at the beginning of this year, the National Commission for Planned Kasty (NCSC) and planned tribes (NCST) also submitted their annual reports for 2023–24 and 2024–25 since last month. The NCSC 2022–23 report, even though it was submitted to the President in February 2024, is still waiting to be submitted in parliament.
In the case of NCST, the President was submitted to five reports covering the years 2018–19 to 2022-23, but must still be laid in the house.
Published – May 30, 2025 22:25 is