Constitutional Provisions
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- Constitutional Basis: Article 350-B, Part XVII, inserted by the 7th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1956.
- Initial Status: Not part of the original Constitution.
- Recommendation Source: States Reorganisation Commission (1953–55).
- Article 350-B:
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- Provides for a Special Officer for Linguistic Minorities.
- Appointed by the President of India.
- Duty: To investigate all matters relating to the safeguards for linguistic minorities under the Constitution.
- Required to report directly to the President.
Note: No provision for qualifications, tenure, salary, or removal procedure is specified in the Constitution.
Office of the Commissioner for Linguistic Minorities (CLM)
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- Established: 1957.
- Designation: Special Officer is referred to as the Commissioner for Linguistic Minorities (CLM).
- Ministry: Comes under the Ministry of Minority Affairs since its creation in 2006.
- Head Office: New Delhi.
Regional Offices:
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- Belagavi (Karnataka)
- Chennai (Tamil Nadu)
- Kolkata (West Bengal)
- Each headed by an Assistant Commissioner.
Reporting & Oversight
- CLM submits annual and special reports to the President of India.
- Reports are routed through the Union Minister for Minority Affairs.
- Focus: Assess the implementation of constitutional and agreed safeguards for linguistic minorities.
Functions of the Commissioner
- Investigate all matters related to the safeguards for linguistic minorities.
- Monitor implementation of constitutional safeguards.
- Report to the President on status and progress.
- Recommend remedial actions to state and UT governments for effective implementation.
Role of the Commissioner
- Grievance redressal:
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- Receives complaints from linguistic minorities (individuals, associations).
- Recommends suitable action to authorities.
- Awareness generation:
- Publicize constitutional safeguards.
- Educate linguistic minorities about their rights.
- Policy support:
- Guide and assist in policy implementation.
- Suggest administrative measures.
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- Cultural preservation:
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- Initiated a 10-point program to revitalize governmental efforts in preserving linguistic diversity.
- Initiated a 10-point program to revitalize governmental efforts in preserving linguistic diversity.
Objectives of the Office
- Submit reports under Article 350-B on safeguard implementation.
- Provide equal opportunities for linguistic minorities in education, employment, and governance.
- Spread awareness about rights and entitlements.
- Ensure effective implementation of linguistic safeguards in states and UTs.
- Take up representations and grievances with concerned authorities.
Challenges
- Lack of enforcement powers; the Commissioner can only recommend, not enforce.
- No penal mechanism for states or UTs failing to implement safeguards.
- Dependence on state machinery for follow-up action.
- Often receives low visibility and administrative priority.
Significance
- Upholds linguistic diversity and pluralism enshrined in Indian democracy.
- Acts as a watchdog institution for smaller linguistic groups often marginalized in state politics.
- Promotes national integration through inclusive language policy.
- Ensures constitutional compliance with Articles 29, 30, 347, 350, and 350-A.
Conclusion
- Though not backed by strong enforcement provisions, the Special Officer for Linguistic Minorities plays a symbolic and consultative role in India’s federal structure.
- Its functioning reinforces India’s commitment to diversity, equity, and constitutional protection of all minority identities, including linguistic ones.

