The Karnataka Government has assured the federation of untouchable Nomadic communities about fair sharing of the internal reservation quota. Because of this assurance, the Karnataka Federation of Untouchable Nomadic Communities has temporarily stopped their 'Belagavi Chalo' protest planned earlier. Government officials said the Bill on internal reservation will likely be introduced in the House on Monday, December 15, 2025. On December 8, 2025, the federation leaders met Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and other ministers. They discussed many solutions. The delegation raised concerns about the government’s long delay in solving the historical injustice against nomadic communities, which has created a serious crisis. A High Court stay linked to nomadic reservation has stopped all recruitment processes, including internal reservation. The leaders said, “Without a clear government decision, the petition pending before the High Court cannot be withdrawn, and the stay cannot be vacated.” To fix this, the delegation proposed several options. They suggested either separating nomadic communities from Category C and giving them 1% reservation as a new Category A, or taking equal parts from existing A, B, and C categories to grant 1.5% reservation to nomadic communities. Another option is accepting the High Court’s decision after court arguments by January 30, 2026. The delegation said, “The government must choose one of these paths.” They also repeated their long-standing demands for a separate Nomadic Development Corporation and a special package for education, housing, and self-employment. They asked the government to clearly state its position when introducing the Bill this session. The state government has set aside a ₹10-crore fund for developing nomadic communities. The ministers present supported the demands. Chief Minister Siddaramaiah said the demand for a separate corporation will be considered, a special welfare package will be implemented, and reservation issues will be addressed based on the meeting’s suggestions. He admitted that earlier political decisions caused injustice but assured, “the government would not abandon nomadic communities.” Federation leaders, Ministers H.C. Mahadevappa, Satish Jarkiholi, H.K. Patil, and other officials attended the meeting.