There've been many arguments given for scrapping the ncm ranging from the right-wing Sangh rationale that minority rights are only a sub-set of general human rights, to the more technical one given by some in the nhrc that a toothless wonder like the ncm, lacking trained investigations and jurists, cannot be as effective as the nhrc with its platoons of former and present policemen, lawyers, judges. Both are facetious arguments, one flowing from the One-Nation-One-People-One-Culture agenda, the other a part of the bureaucratic culture of concentrating power in as few hands as possible. Minority rights are indeed a subset of universal human rights, and it's a truism that the rights of minorities cannot exist in a society which has scant regard for the rights of even the majority community, the common man. But the UN and the Indian Parliament accepted that specially vulnerable groups need additional protection. That's why the UN passed its special resolution on religious freedom, and Parliament created the national commissions for SC, ST, minorities, women, and now children.