Union Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde said work has begun on moving ahead with the Prevention of Communal and Targeted Violence Bill that aims to protect minorities from targeted attacks.
"I have sought details of the bill from the concerned department," he told reporters in Delhi..
Asked whether the bill will be tabled in the next session of Parliament, expected to begin November-end, Shinde said he was not sure. "But yes, work has started on it," he said.
Asked if UPA would table the Bill in the next session of Parliament, Khan told PTI that he was in its favour "but the decision has to be taken by the government".
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A law on the lines of the Bill would have fixed accountability for Muzaffarnagar riots and helped victims who are still waiting for rehabilitation, he said.
The communal clashes in Muzaffarnagar and adjoining areas last month claimed 62 lives and displaced over 40,000 people.
BJP has dubbed the Bill as "anti-majority" while some regional parties feel it violated federal principles.
The Bill has also been opposed by some states as it seeks to empower the central government to send central forces unilaterally in the event of communal disturbances.
The draft bill largely sticks to the provisions in the 'Prevention of Communal and Targeted Violence (Access to Justice and Reparations) Bill, 2011' prepared by Sonia Gandhi-headed National Advisory Council.
"What effect it will have on Jammu and Kashmir keeping in view the special status of the state, what will be the role of our party and role of the coalition (partners), it needs to be discussed," he told reporters in Srinagar. NC is an ally of Congress in UPA.