Financial State At Muk: Fill & Download for Free

GET FORM

Download the form

How to Edit The Financial State At Muk conviniently Online

Start on editing, signing and sharing your Financial State At Muk online under the guide of these easy steps:

  • Click on the Get Form or Get Form Now button on the current page to make access to the PDF editor.
  • Give it a little time before the Financial State At Muk is loaded
  • Use the tools in the top toolbar to edit the file, and the added content will be saved automatically
  • Download your edited file.
Get Form

Download the form

The best-reviewed Tool to Edit and Sign the Financial State At Muk

Start editing a Financial State At Muk in a minute

Get Form

Download the form

A simple direction on editing Financial State At Muk Online

It has become very easy just recently to edit your PDF files online, and CocoDoc is the best free tool you would like to use to make a series of changes to your file and save it. Follow our simple tutorial and start!

  • Click the Get Form or Get Form Now button on the current page to start modifying your PDF
  • Create or modify your text using the editing tools on the tool pane on the top.
  • Affter changing your content, add the date and add a signature to bring it to a perfect comletion.
  • Go over it agian your form before you click to download it

How to add a signature on your Financial State At Muk

Though most people are accustomed to signing paper documents by handwriting, electronic signatures are becoming more usual, follow these steps to sign documents online free!

  • Click the Get Form or Get Form Now button to begin editing on Financial State At Muk in CocoDoc PDF editor.
  • Click on Sign in the tool box on the top
  • A popup will open, click Add new signature button and you'll have three options—Type, Draw, and Upload. Once you're done, click the Save button.
  • Drag, resize and position the signature inside your PDF file

How to add a textbox on your Financial State At Muk

If you have the need to add a text box on your PDF for making your special content, follow the guide to get it done.

  • Open the PDF file in CocoDoc PDF editor.
  • Click Text Box on the top toolbar and move your mouse to drag it wherever you want to put it.
  • Write down the text you need to insert. After you’ve input the text, you can take full use of the text editing tools to resize, color or bold the text.
  • When you're done, click OK to save it. If you’re not satisfied with the text, click on the trash can icon to delete it and start over.

A simple guide to Edit Your Financial State At Muk on G Suite

If you are finding a solution for PDF editing on G suite, CocoDoc PDF editor is a recommended tool that can be used directly from Google Drive to create or edit files.

  • Find CocoDoc PDF editor and establish the add-on for google drive.
  • Right-click on a PDF file in your Google Drive and click Open With.
  • Select CocoDoc PDF on the popup list to open your file with and allow access to your google account for CocoDoc.
  • Edit PDF documents, adding text, images, editing existing text, annotate in highlight, trim up the text in CocoDoc PDF editor before saving and downloading it.

PDF Editor FAQ

What is Maratha Kranti Morcha? What do they really want?

It is true that if part of community gets neglected and financial crunch pinch them then they react or demand for benefit . Nothing is wrong there. Maratha by caste constitutes nearly 40% per cent or somewhere near to that including sub castes of population of state. This community occupied lion’s share in politics, government, bureaucracy, admin, cooperative sector Affluent class in this community grabbed most of benefits and institutions under the name poor majority ( Bahujan Samaj) . They hold for long period and new privileged class was emerged .What is secret of their wealth, prosperity?Large government contracts, like canal, road construction, cooperative banks, sugar plants where state government has stake and right to sanction projects , they used to get grants and clearances from state government what they govern.This was risk free and trouble free operation.These self help group ( Bureaucrats+contractors) looted treasury of state. Y,B. Chavan CM in 1960 built foundation of Maharashtra and did well during his tenure.He was known for welfare schemes(theme—EBC-economically backward classes) benefited all caste and communities of state, large part of budget was allocated for education and skill development.Later Maharashtra became number one or Numero uno in India. It was know ideal developed state especially cooperative sector.Revenue collection and admin was role model.Maratha’s are warriors and rebellions and i love this mindset.This community is rural based and agriculture is livelihood so it has benefits and losses too. Migration from agriculture to industry or non agriculture sector within 2/3 decades , it was mission impossible. America took 100 yrs for this migration.There are good and bad within community. In general they are open minded and social then also infighting, differences, litigation , they made weak themselves. They trusted and supported their leaders but did not get what they expect. Many leaders caught in scandals and community was blamed for every wrong happening.When community lost confidence and feel crunch then violent protest erupt and no government control it.Superstition is a curse on community so Maratha is no exceptionNow the time has come for introspection to do right and improve.Nothing will be given on platter by government so peaceful demonstration is welcome and right step to protest.Let us utilize constructive spirit of all Maharashtra and Maratha to make state again get glory.

What do you think about the Maratha Kranti (Muk) Morcha in Maharashtra?

ndtv.comMarathas vs The Dalits: The Seething Caste War In MaharashtraWritten by Shikha Trivedy | Updated: Sep 27, 2016 15:32 ISTKolhapur, Maharashtra: Lakhs of people from Maharashtra's most powerful caste group, the Marathas, held a muk or silent rally in Pune on Sunday to protest the rape and killing of a 14-year-old girl from the community by three Dalit boys in the village of Kopardi in Ahmednagar district in July. Similar demonstrations have been held since the incident in almost every major town of the Marathwada region dominated by Marathas and are now spreading to the rest of the state under the banner of a newly floated non-political outfit, the Maratha Kranti Samiti.The clout of the new agency is derived partly from its success in bringing on board older groups that have represented the upper caste Marathas - groups like the Akhil Bharatiya Maratha Mahasangh, Sambhaji Brigade and the Maratha Seva Sangh. They want the death penalty for the accused Dalits. They are asking for the abolition of the Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe Prevention of Atrocities Act (POA) 1989 because they say this law, which is meant to prevent and punish violence against Dalits and Adivasis, is being misused by these groups to target the Marathas. "The Dalits receive financial compensation for any atrocity committed on them under the Act. To be able to get this money, they have started filing false cases against the Marathas," alleged a young boy at the Pune rally.But official figures reveal just the opposite. That despite the Act, Maharashtra's weakest castes have little access to justice and continue to be victims of discrimination.Dalits and Adivasis constitute 19% of the state's population, but last year, only 1% of all FIRs registered by the police were filed by members of the Scheduled Castes and Tribes. Of these, the Atrocities Act was applied in less than 40% of the complaints. The conviction rate under the Act has been even more dismal, an average of 7% in the last five years. A staggering 87% of the cases are still pending trial.Which leads many to believe that while Maratha anger may have justifiably been provoked by the Kopardi rape and killing, the demand to scrap the Atrocities Act and restore their honour is directly linked to the community's deep resentment of the government's reservation policy of guaranteeing jobs and seats in educational institutions to lower castes.This affirmative action by the country's lawmakers, which has visibly improved the lives of a section of society's most marginalised people, has also left dominant caste groups like the Jats in Haryana, the Patels in Gujarat and the Marathas fearful of losing their political, social and economic power, traditionally derived from their status as major farmers, and in particular, as cultivators of sugar cane.That's why Marathas, who make up 33% of the state's population, also want to be tagged as an Other Backward Caste - to benefit from reservation, a demand made by the Patels in Gujarat just a few months ago. They are convinced it is the only way to protect the community's future.The demand for a Maratha quota is not a new one. It was first raised after the implementation of the Mandal Commission Report in the early 1990s which added Other Backward Castes (OBC) as a recipient of the benefits of reservation. The influence and participation of OBCs in village panchayats and gram sabhascoincided with the decline in the state's agriculture sector and cooperative societies in rural Maharashtra, the backbone of Maratha pride and power.By the early 2000s, the quota agitation had become more strident. It was spearheaded by militant outfits like the Sambhaji Brigade, now a part of the Maratha Kranti Samiti, which were closely associated with the Nationalist Congress Party and its president, Sharad Pawar. (It's an open secret that Pawar's party supported the 2004 attack by the Sambhaji Brigade on a prestigious research institute in Pune to protest against James Laine's book on Shivaji, alleging it had insulted Maharashtra's legendary warrior king. The violence consolidated the Maratha vote in favour of Pawar, and his party won 72 seats in the assembly elections held that year.)Maratha protesters are demanding 16 per cent quotas in jobs and educationThe Supreme Court has ordered a 50% cap on reserved jobs and college seats - a limit that Maharashtra has already reached. So the Marathas have not been added to the list of beneficiaries. Moreover, three government commissions since the 1990s have stated that since the community never faced social stigma, it cannot qualify as an Other Backward Caste.In the general election in 2014, the Marathas overwhelmingly backed Narendra Modi's development agenda, siding with the BJP and abandoning Sharad Pawar. His party, then in power as part of a coalition with the Congress, moved quickly to win the Marathas back before the state election, which was held just five months after the national election. The coalition announced that an additional 16% reservation would be kept aside for the Marathas because they were economically backward - a route attempted often by state governments to circumvent the Supreme Court limit on caste-based reservation. The new recommendations of the government were based on a survey conducted by the then Industries Minister Narayan Rane, which claimed that only 12% of Marathas go to college and less than 15% are employed by the government.The Marathas spurned Mr Pawar and backed the BJP-Shiv Sena alliance in the election, but their renewed demand for reservations is based on the proposal formed by the NCP-Congress alliance.Narayan Rane's findings failed to point out the real reason for the community's backwardness was the Marathas themselves. Today, 50% of all educational institutions, 70% of district co-operative banks and 90% of the sugar factories in Maharashtra are controlled largely by a handful of Maratha politicians. Just 3,000 families own 72% of the state's total agricultural land. Power and wealth have been increasingly concentrated among an elite section. Simultaneously, the community has been let down by its leaders over the decades.Consider this. Of Maharashtra's 18 Chief Ministers since the state was formed in 1960, ten have been Marathas. The community has also contributed more than half the state's lawmakers (across parties), many of whom amassed great personal wealth and power, but failed to create jobs or promote education. A recent advertisement by the Maharashtra Public Service Commission (MPSC) for filling five vacancies of porters received over 2,500 applications. The required qualification was Class IV pass, but those competing for the job included 250 postgraduates and nearly 1,000 graduates. Amongst them were young Maratha boys convinced that the reservation policy which excludes them is responsible for their unemployment. One of them told NDTV "It is worse than any atrocity committed on a Dalit because they will get compensation from the government and their future is taken care of. We beg, borrow and steal money to fund our education and then spend the rest of our lives breaking stones."Falling desperately short of visionaries, Maratha leaders have come across as just regional satraps more interested in making money for themselves and their parties through capitation or a set fee per student in colleges built by them, presiding over - even facilitating - the decline of sugar cooperatives and then buying them in sweetheart deals, and relaunching them as private sugar-processing factories that make good money."If the leaders were genuinely concerned about the backwardness of the community, then they would have addressed the issue of agricultural revival or job creation in areas like Marathwada where the vast majority of poor Marathas live, or in several parts of the so-called prosperous sugar belt of Western Maharashtra which are still underdeveloped. But they have not raised these economic concerns at the rallies, and focused only on the perceived threat to their honour and identity from the others," Professor Prakash Pawar, who teaches Political Science at Kolhapur University, told NDTV.The BJP has accused Maratha leaders in the Congress and Mr Pawar's party of orchestrating these protests to derail its government's investigation into several scams in the cooperative and irrigation sector during their rule - among those being probed are Mr Pawar's powerful nephew, Ajit Pawar, who was the state's Irrigation Minister for 10 years. But many see this mobilisation as an attempt by Maratha politicians across parties to stay relevant, at a time when other caste groups are asserting themselves in very diverse ways - they cite the rise of a highly educated class among Dalits, or the Brahmin resurgence in the BJP (apart from Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, union ministers Nitin Gadkari and Prakash Javadekar, both senior leaders from Maharashtra, are also Brahmins.)Chief Minister Fadnavis has announced the appointment of Ujjwal Nikam as the public prosecutor in the murder of the Maratha teen and promised that the suspects will be awarded the death penalty if found guilty.Exactly ten years ago this week, on September 29, 2006, the Mumbai High Court refused to apply the SC/ST Atrocities Act to the public lynching of the wife and children of Bhaiyalal Bhotmange, a Dalit farmer in the village of Khairlanji in Maharashtra's Bhandara district. Their attackers were Kunbis, a sub-caste of the Marathas. The judges ruled it was a case of revenge killing, not a caste-based attack. The accused were sentenced to 25 years in prison. The public prosecutor in this case was also Ujjwal Nikam - while the Chief Minister of the State at the time was Vilasrao Deshmukh, a Maratha.© Copyright NDTV Convergence Limited 2016. All Rights Reserved

In Maharashtra Maratha agitation is on fire with long march of a million people.Who is leading and funding this activity?What is intention? Anti BJP ?

ndtv.comMarathas vs The Dalits: The Seething Caste War In MaharashtraWritten by Shikha Trivedy | Updated: Sep 27, 2016 15:32 ISTKolhapur, Maharashtra: Lakhs of people from Maharashtra's most powerful caste group, the Marathas, held a muk or silent rally in Pune on Sunday to protest the rape and killing of a 14-year-old girl from the community by three Dalit boys in the village of Kopardi in Ahmednagar district in July. Similar demonstrations have been held since the incident in almost every major town of the Marathwada region dominated by Marathas and are now spreading to the rest of the state under the banner of a newly floated non-political outfit, the Maratha Kranti Samiti.The clout of the new agency is derived partly from its success in bringing on board older groups that have represented the upper caste Marathas - groups like the Akhil Bharatiya Maratha Mahasangh, Sambhaji Brigade and the Maratha Seva Sangh. They want the death penalty for the accused Dalits. They are asking for the abolition of the Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe Prevention of Atrocities Act (POA) 1989 because they say this law, which is meant to prevent and punish violence against Dalits and Adivasis, is being misused by these groups to target the Marathas. "The Dalits receive financial compensation for any atrocity committed on them under the Act. To be able to get this money, they have started filing false cases against the Marathas," alleged a young boy at the Pune rally.But official figures reveal just the opposite. That despite the Act, Maharashtra's weakest castes have little access to justice and continue to be victims of discrimination.Dalits and Adivasis constitute 19% of the state's population, but last year, only 1% of all FIRs registered by the police were filed by members of the Scheduled Castes and Tribes. Of these, the Atrocities Act was applied in less than 40% of the complaints. The conviction rate under the Act has been even more dismal, an average of 7% in the last five years. A staggering 87% of the cases are still pending trial.Which leads many to believe that while Maratha anger may have justifiably been provoked by the Kopardi rape and killing, the demand to scrap the Atrocities Act and restore their honour is directly linked to the community's deep resentment of the government's reservation policy of guaranteeing jobs and seats in educational institutions to lower castes.This affirmative action by the country's lawmakers, which has visibly improved the lives of a section of society's most marginalised people, has also left dominant caste groups like the Jats in Haryana, the Patels in Gujarat and the Marathas fearful of losing their political, social and economic power, traditionally derived from their status as major farmers, and in particular, as cultivators of sugar cane.That's why Marathas, who make up 33% of the state's population, also want to be tagged as an Other Backward Caste - to benefit from reservation, a demand made by the Patels in Gujarat just a few months ago. They are convinced it is the only way to protect the community's future.The demand for a Maratha quota is not a new one. It was first raised after the implementation of the Mandal Commission Report in the early 1990s which added Other Backward Castes (OBC) as a recipient of the benefits of reservation. The influence and participation of OBCs in village panchayats and gram sabhascoincided with the decline in the state's agriculture sector and cooperative societies in rural Maharashtra, the backbone of Maratha pride and power.By the early 2000s, the quota agitation had become more strident. It was spearheaded by militant outfits like the Sambhaji Brigade, now a part of the Maratha Kranti Samiti, which were closely associated with the Nationalist Congress Party and its president, Sharad Pawar. (It's an open secret that Pawar's party supported the 2004 attack by the Sambhaji Brigade on a prestigious research institute in Pune to protest against James Laine's book on Shivaji, alleging it had insulted Maharashtra's legendary warrior king. The violence consolidated the Maratha vote in favour of Pawar, and his party won 72 seats in the assembly elections held that year.)Maratha protesters are demanding 16 per cent quotas in jobs and educationThe Supreme Court has ordered a 50% cap on reserved jobs and college seats - a limit that Maharashtra has already reached. So the Marathas have not been added to the list of beneficiaries. Moreover, three government commissions since the 1990s have stated that since the community never faced social stigma, it cannot qualify as an Other Backward Caste.In the general election in 2014, the Marathas overwhelmingly backed Narendra Modi's development agenda, siding with the BJP and abandoning Sharad Pawar. His party, then in power as part of a coalition with the Congress, moved quickly to win the Marathas back before the state election, which was held just five months after the national election. The coalition announced that an additional 16% reservation would be kept aside for the Marathas because they were economically backward - a route attempted often by state governments to circumvent the Supreme Court limit on caste-based reservation. The new recommendations of the government were based on a survey conducted by the then Industries Minister Narayan Rane, which claimed that only 12% of Marathas go to college and less than 15% are employed by the government.The Marathas spurned Mr Pawar and backed the BJP-Shiv Sena alliance in the election, but their renewed demand for reservations is based on the proposal formed by the NCP-Congress alliance.Narayan Rane's findings failed to point out the real reason for the community's backwardness was the Marathas themselves. Today, 50% of all educational institutions, 70% of district co-operative banks and 90% of the sugar factories in Maharashtra are controlled largely by a handful of Maratha politicians. Just 3,000 families own 72% of the state's total agricultural land. Power and wealth have been increasingly concentrated among an elite section. Simultaneously, the community has been let down by its leaders over the decades.Consider this. Of Maharashtra's 18 Chief Ministers since the state was formed in 1960, ten have been Marathas. The community has also contributed more than half the state's lawmakers (across parties), many of whom amassed great personal wealth and power, but failed to create jobs or promote education. A recent advertisement by the Maharashtra Public Service Commission (MPSC) for filling five vacancies of porters received over 2,500 applications. The required qualification was Class IV pass, but those competing for the job included 250 postgraduates and nearly 1,000 graduates. Amongst them were young Maratha boys convinced that the reservation policy which excludes them is responsible for their unemployment. One of them told NDTV "It is worse than any atrocity committed on a Dalit because they will get compensation from the government and their future is taken care of. We beg, borrow and steal money to fund our education and then spend the rest of our lives breaking stones."Falling desperately short of visionaries, Maratha leaders have come across as just regional satraps more interested in making money for themselves and their parties through capitation or a set fee per student in colleges built by them, presiding over - even facilitating - the decline of sugar cooperatives and then buying them in sweetheart deals, and relaunching them as private sugar-processing factories that make good money."If the leaders were genuinely concerned about the backwardness of the community, then they would have addressed the issue of agricultural revival or job creation in areas like Marathwada where the vast majority of poor Marathas live, or in several parts of the so-called prosperous sugar belt of Western Maharashtra which are still underdeveloped. But they have not raised these economic concerns at the rallies, and focused only on the perceived threat to their honour and identity from the others," Professor Prakash Pawar, who teaches Political Science at Kolhapur University, told NDTV.The BJP has accused Maratha leaders in the Congress and Mr Pawar's party of orchestrating these protests to derail its government's investigation into several scams in the cooperative and irrigation sector during their rule - among those being probed are Mr Pawar's powerful nephew, Ajit Pawar, who was the state's Irrigation Minister for 10 years. But many see this mobilisation as an attempt by Maratha politicians across parties to stay relevant, at a time when other caste groups are asserting themselves in very diverse ways - they cite the rise of a highly educated class among Dalits, or the Brahmin resurgence in the BJP (apart from Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis, union ministers Nitin Gadkari and Prakash Javadekar, both senior leaders from Maharashtra, are also Brahmins.)Chief Minister Fadnavis has announced the appointment of Ujjwal Nikam as the public prosecutor in the murder of the Maratha teen and promised that the suspects will be awarded the death penalty if found guilty.Exactly ten years ago this week, on September 29, 2006, the Mumbai High Court refused to apply the SC/ST Atrocities Act to the public lynching of the wife and children of Bhaiyalal Bhotmange, a Dalit farmer in the village of Khairlanji in Maharashtra's Bhandara district. Their attackers were Kunbis, a sub-caste of the Marathas. The judges ruled it was a case of revenge killing, not a caste-based attack. The accused were sentenced to 25 years in prison. The public prosecutor in this case was also Ujjwal Nikam - while the Chief Minister of the State at the time was Vilasrao Deshmukh, a Maratha.© Copyright NDTV Convergence Limited 2016. All Rights Reserved

Comments from Our Customers

Great tool for optimizing and managing PDF files. No hassle, no technical knowledge. Just "plug and play"

Justin Miller