The bench admitted the fresh plea with 
            the old demand, thouh at least two similar lawsuits are pending with 
            it. 
             
            
            Over two and a half years ago on July 19, 
            2007, the chief justice's bench had asked the central government to 
            firm up within two months its view on according the Scheduled Caste 
            status to Dalit Christians. 
             
            
            The bench, then headed by Chief Justice 
            K.G. Balakrishnan and having Justice R.V. Raveendran and Justice 
            Dalveer Bhandari on it, had also sought from then additional 
            solicitor general Gopal Subramanium, now the country's solicitor 
            general, "all information, data and details" within eight weeks to 
            help it arrive at a decision. 
             
            
            The bench in July 2007 had issued these 
            directions while hearing two lawsuits filed in 2004 by the Centre 
            for Public Interest Litigation and advocate D. David of Vellore in 
            Tamil Nadu. 
             
            
            The chief justice's bench this time 
            simply tagged the new petition for hearing with the old ones.
             
            
            Like the earlier petitions, the new one 
            too has challenged the legality of para 3 of the Constitution 
            Scheduled Castes Order, 1950, which provides the 'untouchable 
            Hindus' the Schedulec Caste status for benefit of affirmative 
            actions like reservations. 
             
            
            But the earlier untouchables among Hindus 
            on conversion to Christianity or Islam lose the benefit of 
            reservation, the lawsuit rued. 
             
            
            The lawsuit contended that the order had 
            been amended earlier to include even the Dalit Sikhs and Buddhists 
            in the Scheduled Castes list. 
             
            
            Arguing for provision of similar 
            treatment to Dalit Christians as well, the lawsuit argued that the 
            state cannot deny affirmative action to citizens on the basis of 
            religion. 
             
            
            The lawsuit pointed out to the court that 
            the issue of according Scheduled Caste status had been examined by 
            the National Commission for Religious and Linguistic Minorities, 
            headed by the Supreme Court's former chief justice Rangnath Mishra.
            
             
            
            Mishra, 
            in turn, had submitted his report to Prime Minister Maanmohan Singh 
            May 14, 2007, recommending that Dalit Christians could be accorded 
            Schedules Caste status. 
             
            
            The prime minister had referred the 
            matter for closer examination by the National Commission for the 
            Schedule Castes. 
             
            
            The new petition, as the old ones, 
            mentioned all these old facts and made old arguments and eventually 
            got tagged with them, adding to the list of 53,000-odd cases piling 
            up in the apex court.