The Commission is not doing its work properly. It is very slow. So many applications are pending with them. That has to be expedited. I hope that the hon. Minister would pressurize the Commission to go the Supreme Court. If not the Supreme Court, you can bring forward legislation. How can the Supreme Court dilute Article 30 in the TMA Pai's case or the Namdar's case? The Supreme Court has diluted Article 30. It is my college. I am opening my college for my studnets. I cannot give them admission. I have to rely on the State Government. Who is the State Government? Not even a single pie has been given by the State Government. Through my sweat and blood, I have formed these colleges. That is the real issue. That is why I brought it to the notice of the Government. I hope the Government will take it in the right spirit and take corrective measures. Still there is some time for them to take these measures. Mr. Deputy-Speaker, Sir, I too rise to support this Bill. This is a Bill to amend the earlier Bill which was passed in 2004 and it was discussed thredbare in this House. Sir, from the discussion that has just taken place here, it is very clear that almost everybody agrees that all the amendments accept the last one regarding whether to consult State Governments or not. Before going into that, I was rather pained to listen to my good friend Tripahtyji who said that this Bill is entirely for facilitating the business interests of the minorities. I do not understand that. In the educational field, it is an established fact that minority communities of this country have done yeoman's service. In fact, if we go through the list of excellence are being run by minority communities in this country mostly, not that Government institutions are not of that high standard. He never diminished his commitment to his kind of 'satyagraha' against injustice and inequality. His stoic determination, patience and magnanimity reminded us, in India, of the revolutionary methods of Mahatma Gandhi. It was, therefore, an honour for Indians. In 1995, when visited India as the first President of post-apartheid Africa, Mandela visited Gandhiji's Sabarmati Ashram and said that it was for him a homecoming, a pilgrimage. We, on our part, associate South Africa with the first chapter of Mahatma Gandhi's freedom movement. Gandhiji had staked his carrier as a budding lawyer in South Africa to resist segregation and inequality-before he embarked for India and took up, in India, the same cause. The six principles that Madiba identified as the fundamentals of the foreign policy of the new South Africa equal human rights, democracy, respect for international law, world peace achieved through non-violent means, effective arms control regimes and economic.
