Just days ago, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh underlined the dismal state of education in the Muslim community as being key to the fact of its severe under-representation in employment, both public and private.
Nowhere is this more starkly evident than in the top bureaucracy, the IAS, IPS and the IFS where the share is as low as 1.6% (in the IFS) to a high of just over 3% (IPS).
While the share of Muslims in all state government jobs — across all grades — in a dozen high-Muslim population states is just over 6%, way below their share in the population (15.4%), as first reported by The Indian Express last week, their average share in the nation’s top bureaucracy is not even half this figure.
A run-down through the Civil List 2006 (as on January 1, 2006) shows that Muslims constitute barely 2.2 per cent of the Indian Administrative Services (IAS).
There are around 108 Muslim IAS officers in the government of a total of 4790 such officers in the country. The figure includes 1248 State Services Officers who have been promoted to the IAS.
Mohammed Riazuddin of the Kerala cadre is the seniormost Muslim IAS officer in the country. While Riazuddin, who is Director of Institute of Management in Government at Thiruvananthapuram, declined to comment, experts say the key reason, once again, could be access to education.
Of the population above 20, barely 3.6% of the Muslim community are college graduates — the minimum requirement for an opening in the civil service — according to 2004-5 data from the National Sample Survey Organisation.
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