Thursday, June 26, 2008

'Andhra Jyoti' office attacked

The office of the Telugu daily 'Andhra Jyoti' was attacked by an alleged dalit activist. Earlier, the police had arrested the editor and two journalists of the Telugu daily after a complaint was lodged by the Madiga Reservation Samiti alleging their president had been abused on the basis of caste. Mediamen hold protest rallies in AP Enraged over the arrest of an editor and two other journalists in Andhra Pradesh, mediapersons today held protest rallies across the state and boycotted the press conference of Home Minister K Jana Reddy who assured to order a CID probe into the incident.
In an unprecedented late night action, the police went to the office of leading Telugu daily 'Andhra Jyothi' here and took into custody its Editor K Srinivas and two journalists Vamsi and Srinivas under the stringent Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act. The arrest followed a complaint by a Dalit organisation alleging that the staff of the newspaper had insulted its leader and burnt his effigy while holding a protest rally last month. Meanwhile, the arrested journalists were shifted to Chanchalguda jail after a local magistrate remanded them to 14-day judicial custody.
The trouble had started following publication of a lead story in the second largest circulated daily last month that criticised unnamed Dalit leaders and their organisations for their "blackmailing tactics". The story triggered a violent protest by activists of Madiga Reservation Porata Samithi (MRPS) who attacked the daily's office on May 26.
The arrests, termed by the opposition and journalists' bodies as an attack on media freedom, evoked widespread condemnation. The members of Andhra Pradesh Union of Working Journalists (APUWJ) today organised sit-ins across the state demanding immediate release of the journalists of Andhra Jyothi. BJP expresses solidarity The BJP state unit expressed its solidarity with the journalists and demanded release of the arrested editor and two reporters of Telugu daily, 'Andhra Jyothi'. The action of the police reminded the emergency days and asked the state government to withdraw cases against them, a party release said. (PTI)

After journey from sickle to camera, they have a message for Vidarbha’s farmers

Mumbai, June 24 In city to release series of films on ‘food sovereignty’, Dalit and peasant women film-makers advise cotton farmers to move to food crops
A group of poor, uneducated Dalit women from Pastapur, a small village in Andhra Pradesh, is in the city with a piece of advice for Vidarbha’s farmers: Form communities, shift to food crops and stay strong, not just to survive, but also to live with dignity.
All peasants, these women know a thing or two about living with heads held high. For they are now in the city as filmmakers, here to release a series of films on “food sovereignty” in south India.
“The reason Vidarbha’s farmers are forced to commit suicide is because they have nothing with them. They worked on a crop not suiting their eco-system, they don’t have seeds of their own, even manure is procured from the market, labour is hired, their own lands are leased out,” said Holigeri Chandraumma (62), speaking in Telugu. “They need community support. Those farmers not cultivating cotton should encourage others to go back to food crops and be self-sufficient in terms of own nutrition as well as earning good money,” added Chandramma who, along with 5,000 other Dalit women of the Deccan Development Society (DDS) from 75 villages of Medak District in Andhra Pradesh, is actively involved in capturing issues related to agriculture on camera.
The message comes from lessons learnt the hard way. “Just when things were going right with our millet crop, the N T Rama Rao government introduced rice at Rs 2 in the public distribution system. Not just the landlords, even the daily wage earners making Rs 25 per day got their ration for the whole month. This not just affected the nutrition of the family members as dietary patterns changed but also the cultivating patterns. People became apathetic towards farming, since rice was easily available,” recalls P V Satheesh, director of the DDS.
In 2001, after a few Dalit women from the group were selected to undergo training in media, the Community Media Trust came into existence. Since then, the trust has been working on farmers’ issues and their rights.
Today, the trust has 10 cameras plus editing equipment. Many of their videos have had great impact not just on society but also forced governments to act. One such instance was the ban on BT Cotton by the state government. “Our five years of extensive research captured on film paved the way to a ban on BT Cotton by the AP government,” said Hasangari Narsamma (35). All the women were trained extensively for eight months, to shoot as well as to edit.
Cameras in tow, they have come a long way from village roads to global highways, acting both as peasant representatives as well as media personnel. Their films are not just shown in international and national film festivals but are also an integral part of biodiversity conferences in London, having been dubbed in French, German and Spanish.
“The camera can only record, but at the fundamental level, it is the issue of food driving us,” said Chandramma.
“A big hurdle was that we were all victims of untouchability, but the camera lifted us from untouchability. We requested one of the upper caste landlords to allow us to shoot the way they celebrate Dasera. We were not just allowed into their houses but also into their house temples,” said Begari Laxmi (40), who says her camera is no different to her from her sickle

Dalit women invisible citizens: Report

Reveals prevalence of untouchability
Recommends a redress mechanism
JAIPUR: A fact-finding mission’s report on the status of dalit women in Rajasthan released here on Monday has brought to light the critical denial of rights to them on the basis of caste as well as gender. Dalit women were found having very little access to livelihood, food, water, sanitation and the government’s welfare programmes.

As untouchables and outcastes, dalit women invariably face caste-based discrimination. As women, they face gender discrimination, and as poor, they face class discrimination, affirmed the report prepared by two leading dalit and women’s rights groups.

The Centre for Dalit Rights (CDR) and the Programme on Women’s Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (PWESCR) conducted field surveys in five localities inhabited by dalits in Jaipur and Dausa districts to assess “exclusion and subordination” of dalit women. “Dalit women are restricted to the bottom of the society, impoverished and invisible as citizens,” noted the report.
Releasing the report here in the presence of dalit activists, academicians and community leaders, State Assembly Speaker Sumitra Singh admitted that “systematic denial” of right to education, training, land and livelihood resources during the 60 years of Independence had led to exclusion of dalit women from all socio-economic and political fields. Ms. Singh called upon the dalit groups to exert pressure on government functionaries to provide health care, nutrition and other basic services in the dalit-dominated areas. “Access to education will surely enable dalit women to assert their rights and improve their living conditions,” she said.

The 39-page report said all dalit communities in the State were suffering from the practice of untouchability and deliberate segregation. The fact-finding teams visiting the five areas found that dalits lived in ghetto-like structures within the segregated areas away from the general population.

CDR chairperson P. L. Mimroth said that there was a complete lack of information about the State programmes and schemes and entitlements for dalits under them. With dalit men and women being unable to access these sources, the government functionaries had a sense of complacency and no concern for accountability.

The dalit habitations covered by the field surveys were the Jhalana Doongri Kachchi Basti, Jaipur; Bagarion Ki Dhani, Pachala; Kadwa Ka Bas, Dudu (all in Jaipur district) and Raigar Mohalla, Gudalia; and Raigar Basti, Dausa city (both in Dausa district).

Preeti Darooka of PWESCR said the only occupations available and traditionally allocated to dalit women were those that no one else would prefer to do. “The fact-finding clearly demonstrates that in spite of various laws and schemes for dalits, not much is being done on the ground to address the day-to-day hardships faced by dalit women,” she said.

The report demanded that the State government develop a monitoring system to recognise the discrimination faced by dailt women in all walks of life. There should also be a redress mechanism to deal with the complaints of violation of rights and dalit women should be made aware of their legal rights.

The report also underlined the need to bring about “radical changes” in the mind-set of people who see nothing wrong in the customary practices of social exclusion of dalit women. It said the government should ensure that dalit children had access to education without being discriminated.

Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Story of a Dalit poet in India

Rampur (UP), June 18: Kanwal Bharti, the son of a Dalit cobbler in backward Rampur district of Uttar Pradesh, was born and raised in slums.
After years of struggle with poverty, his poetry has now been included in curriculum prescribed for post-graduate studies in various national universities.
"My father Bhagwan Das earned very little by stitching shoes but he opted to spend much on my education, instead of bothering about my meals and dresses," said Bharti.
"At the age of 15, I started writing poetry and articles to highlight the sad condition of Dalits," he added. While pursuing his graduation, Bharti became a columnist for Hindi weekly newspaper Sahkari Yuga.
His work has now been included in course books prescribed by Delhi University, Indira Gandhi National Open University, Allahabad University, Aligarh Muslim University and Lucknow University. His famous works include two poems -- Tab Tumhari Nishtha Kya Hogi and Shambook -- besides a criticism titled 'Philosophy of Dalit Literature.'
Bharti has authored 15 books. He is also a recipient of Dr Ambedkar National Award 1996 and Bhim Ratna Award 2001.

Unheard cobbler starts his own journal


Rubina Khan Shapoo
Tuesday, June 17, 2008 (Bhopal)
What happens when you want someone to tell your story but no one is listening? You start your own mouthpiece! That's what a Dalit man, Suresh Nanmehar, was forced to do. He is a cobbler and also brings out a newspaper that addresses Dalit issues. In 2003 cobblers, most of who are Dalits protested for almost a month demanding better facilities.
It was an event ignored by the local media, something this man vowed wouldn't happen again.''Not a single newspaper reported about us, then I realized that I have to start the revolution myself and that is why I took out this paper,'' said Suresh Nanmehar, Edior, Baal Ki Khaal.In the past six years, the circulation of the paper has gone to eight thousand. The two-rupee paper has no space for rapes and murders but focusses largely on Dalit issues and problems of the economically backward.
Most writers are Dalits who do this for free.''It has so many topics that you do not find in other papers,'' said Mukesh Dangi, reader.The paper costs nearly Rs 6000, most of which comes from the Dalit community and now the state government has also started advertising in it.Suresh Nanmehar pleads with his community, urges them and some times threatens them to stand up. He asks them to get educated to fight for their right, with his newspaper of course, fighting a battle for equality with words.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Panel may allow sub-division of SCs


NEW DELHI: Congress is moving to confront the political challenge of Dalit consolidation by dividing SCs into competing sub-groups, with indications that the national commission is likely to give its nod to the proposal. Top sources said the National Commission for SCs, headed by Congress veteran Buta Singh, is inclined towards approving Justice Usha Mehra Commission's report which has recommended that SCs be divided into groups with the community's total job quota apportioned among them. The move is ostensibly aimed at resolving the complaint that a few dominant groups have cornered quota benefits, squeezing out others from the focus of affirmative action.
The view in the national panel, packed with Congress full-timers, is in consonance with the Congress which, as leader of UPA government, took the initiative for SC sub-categorization. The panel is led by Congress insider Buta Singh and includes party leaders Satya Behen, Mritunjay Naik and Mahendra Boddh. Insiders said the Congress-commission convergence is rooted in the urgency to win back the SC votebase to the party fold by striking at the political mobilisation of Dalits outside. On this front, Bahujan Samaj Party has emerged as a potent challenge to Congress at the pan-Indian level.
The reason for opposition to the proposal by a section of Dalit activists is exactly why Congress has been on overdrive to get it done. The former feel the division of SCs into sub-groups, with a separate quota, would turn them into rival groups while also reducing their stake in social consolidation. It would hit at the heart of exclusive Dalit banners like BSP, with the weakened unity among SCs the ideal recipe for Congress to try winning them back. The view in the SC commission is in favour of the proposal, with insiders saying the "Centre has made a strong case" for sub-categorization. Justice Mehra's recommendation is seen as well as backed by attorney-general Milon Banerjee's opinion that sub-categorization of SCs was not unconstitutional. It was done by Andhra Pradesh but struck down by a constitution bench of Supreme Court, prompting the state to seek central intervention. State chief minister Y S Rajasekhara Reddy has emerged as a strong voice in the Congress in its favour.
The only hitch, sources said, is an earlier opinion given by the commission against the proposal. "But," a key person in the panel said, "the proposal is likely to get through." The commission will soon take up the Justice Mehra report which was sent to it by the union social justice ministry. After the SC panel's opinion, it would be up to the Centre to decide if it has to go ahead for a constitutional amendment. Rubbishing the claim that sub-division of SCs was violative of the Constitution, the A-G had opined that it could be done if there was unimpeachable evidence to prove that quota benefits were cornered by a few SC groups.
Justice Mehra report, in its study based on data from AP and submitted last month, has also argued that a few SCs have pushed out others from taking advantage of reservation policy. It has sought a constitutional amendment to facilitate division of SCs if states sent proposals, backed by the evidence from inquiry committees, to show that there was a skewed distribution of quota benefits.

In UP, Dalits finally ‘dare’ in this reserved seat

Malasa, June 16 For the first time in three years, two Dalits on Monday finally mustered the courage to contest for the post of gram pradhan from the reserved seat of Malasa in Kanpur Dehat.
On May 20, this newspaper had highlighted the fact that despite being ruled by a party that espouses the cause of the Dalits, this Uttar Pradesh village was too scared to choose a Dalit gram pradhan.
Previously, elections were held in August 2005 and February 2006, but on both the occasions under immense pressure from the dominant Thakurs, none of the Dalits filed nominations.
On Monday, with the Kanpur Dehat district and police officials waking up to address the issue, the entire village was transformed into a police fortress and a section of PAC was posted at the Block Development Officer’s office for nomination. The entire force of Bhognipur and Moosanagar police stations were deployed in the village. One circle officer and two station officers were also on duty in the village. To boost the moral of the Dalits, a Bahujan Samaj Party team, led by district president Ram Babu Gautam, was present in the Block Development Office till the time the nomination process was over.
However, it wasn’t all smooth for the Dalits. The Block Development Office was surrounded by over 500 Thakurs till the nomination papers were filed.
The Dalits coming to the Block Development Office were threatened and abused. That, however, was no deterrent for Chandrika Prasad and Lallai. Both of them filed their respective set of nomination papers for gram pradhan polls.
Chandrika Prasad, a postgraduate, had previously made an attempt to file nomination in August 2005 elections, but threats by Thakurs compelled him to back out.
After assurance from the cops and the district authorities, he filed his nomination on Monday. “This time, the situation is different. I have the support of the district and police authorities who are ensuring a fair polls,” he told The Indian Express.
Equally confident of victory was Lallai. “For the first time in past three years, any Dalit has dared to challenge the Thakurs’ supremacy,” he said.
The village has a population of 3,033, out of which 1,400 are voters and of these 1,250 are Thakurs and a mere 134 are Dalits.
District Magistrate O P N Singh said: “It was heartening to see the Dalits filing their nominations. We will ensure peaceful polls on June 28.”
Source: Expressindia.com

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Dalit found dead in Barabanki district jail

Faizabad, June 14 A Dalit prisoner was found dead under suspicious circumstances in Barabanki district jail on Saturday. While the police claimed that Sudarshan Gautam (60) died of a heart attack, his family accused the jail administration of beating him and denying medical care.
By the time two jail officials brought Gautam to the hospital, he was already dead, said an official at the jail hospital. Sources said Gautam might have died 10 to 12 hours before he was taken to hospital.
Gautam was serving a seven-year imprisonment term in an attempt to murder case, which was awarded to him two years ago. He is a resident of Churauliya Masauli village in Barabanki. His son, Ramanand, said that when he had met his father a week ago, he had complained of “inhuman behaviour of jail staff and daily torture” that he had to face. “Since we do not have money to pay the jail staff, they asked my ailing father to do heavy work. When he was unable to do so, they used to beat him,” he said.
Jail superintendent Ram Dhani, however, denied the allegations.
Source: Expressindia.com

Delhi: 50% Christian quota in St Stephen's


NEW DELHI: After months of speculation, St Stephen’s on Saturday clearly stated its stand on its minority status - 50% of seats in the college will now go to Christians. In what could be a blow to the hopes of students from other communities, St Stephen’s spokesman Sunil Mathew made it clear the percentage could even increase in future.
‘‘For this year, 50% is the cap on reservation for Christians. Next year we will look into the issue again.” Some seats will, however, be added for the sports quota. Of the seats, 40% will be open to the general category, 10% has been reserved for non-Christian SC/ST and physically handicapped while students from the sports category will get a 5% quota over and above the sanctioned seats. All four groups have been categorized as Category A for Christians, B for general merit, C for SC/ST and physically handicapped and D for the sports category. Mathew told TOI the decision was a reflection of what the college’s supreme council felt.
‘‘Members felt Christians were not getting sufficient representation in the college and so the quota had to be increased,” he said. The release sent by Sunil Kumar Singh, Bishop, Delhi and chairperson, St Stephen’s Council clearly states: “In any event, admission in Category A shall not be less than 50% and would also include Dalit Christian, Christian SC/ST and physically handicapped Christian candidates to the extent of 10% of the total number of sanctioned seats in the college.”
Last year, the 40% Christian quota included 10% for Dalit Christians but there was no provision for the physically handicapped or SC/ST category. The college will create new seats for students coming through the sports quota. But the admission procedure remains unchanged — 75% weightage to class 12 marks, 15% to class 10 marks and 10% to the interview.
source:TOI

Dalit-killer dacoit falls to Maya cops


by TAPAS CHAKRABORTY
Lucknow, June 13: A Chambal bandit was gunned down today three months after he had massacred five Dalits, embarrassing chief minister Mayavati.
Police shot dead Deep Chand alias Nadia, 41, and an associate after an encounter in the jungles of Etawah in Chambal early this morning.
“He fought like a wounded tiger before he fell in a fusillade of shots,” a policeman said.
Nadia led a small gang in Etawah, kidnapping middle-class traders for ransom, but hit the headlines on March 13 by killing five members of a Dalit family in Ameenabad village of the district.
The Opposition immediately raised a furore questioning Mayavati’s ability to protect Dalits, who form her main vote bank. The chief minister visited the village on March 14 and Rahul Gandhi, who has been courting Dalits in the state, followed the next day.
Sources said Mayavati told the district police to get Nadia urgently, and in April the force cornered the gang. But although Nadia’s brother-in-law Roop Singh and two other gang members, Udaibhan and Hari Sahai, were killed, Nadia himself escaped.
His luck ran out today when a team of 22 policemen crept up on the gang from all sides in the forests of Takrupara near the Yamuna’s banks.
The police said there were six to seven dacoits in the group but apart from Nadia and an associate, the rest escaped. Sonbeer alias Lokharia, 32, fell with his leader, firing continuously from his improvised rifle till the end. An automatic rifle and several cartridges were found on the dead dacoits.
Additional director-general of police Brij Lal said the gang’s whereabouts were revealed two days ago when the dacoits released a teenage girl whom they had kidnapped from Naiaputia village on May 13. Vinita Jatav had been abducted on her way to a relative’s wedding.
The gang faces about 25 criminal cases, including that of murder and kidnapping. It had abducted and killed a four-year-old boy from Kanpur two years ago.
Etawah superintendent of police S.R. Aditya said Nadia was trying to move into the space left vacant by the killings of the notorious bandits, Nirbhay Gujjar and Mohar Singh.
Just as Nadia met his end after virtually throwing a challenge to Mayavati, Nirbhay was shot dead after declaring publicly that he would surrender only if then chief minister Mulayam Singh Yadav agreed to give him political asylum.
“I respect him a lot,” he had said about Mulayam, who happened to be from his own district, Etawah. That would have been embarrassing for the chief minister, whose police sought out the bandit and killed him two months later, on November 8, 2005.
Source: Telegraph

SC tag for dalit converts remains a distant dream


NEW DELHI: Despite the activism by Sachar panel and UPA ministers, 'Scheduled Caste' tag for dalit converts to Islam and Christianity seems to be off. The National Commission for Backward Castes has asked the states for names of SC equivalent groups among minorities, and their population figures. The one-line query is set to put off the controversial issue for an indefinite period. While the population figures on 'dalit minorities' are not available with states, it would be a stiff challenge to pick SCs from the OBC list of which the minorities are a part. BJP may turn the process into a complete non-starter, as the saffron outfit controls 10 states.
While JD(U), BJP's coalition partner in Bihar, is in favour of the proposal, the BJP has made it clear that it cannot make any concession on the issue. Ever since Rangnath Mishra commission recommended that SC status be made religion-neutral, injecting a fresh dose of political lobbying, the issue has received two serious setbacks. Without objecting to the Mishra panel's recommendation, National Commission for SCs has argued that reservation for dalit converts should neither disturb the 15% quota earmarked for SCs nor violate the 50% quota ceiling fixed by Supreme Court. If the panel's opinion is to be respected, the case is as good as closed.
The NCBC decision to involve states to estimate the population of converts has made it more difficult. Abdul Ali Azizi, member of NCBC, told TOI, "The states may not have exact data on dalit converts but they can find a rough estimate. At least, they can give synonyms of SCs among minorities." He said that states should, in the long run, go for a census to identify the beneficiaries. Having raised aspirations among minority groups, the demand has led to pressure within the Congress and UPA to include dalit converts in the SC list. But a few sections in the ruling party see it as politically fraught as the saffron family has come out strongly against the proposal, saying it would remove the only deterrent against conversions.
The NCBC decision to ask states for population figures seems to result from a calculated decision in the ruling echelons to put the issue on the backburner despite the pressure from coalition partners to accept the Mishra panel's report. The social justice ministry, instead of moving on SC commission's opinion in December 2007, sent a set of tough queries to NCBC in February. It asked the OBC panel to name the dalit communities which converted to Islam and Christianity, criteria for their identification, and their population.

Compensation of Rs. 1.5 lakhs for dalit victim's family

Kanpur (PTI): Two policemen accused of thrashing a dalit youth to death in custody here were arrested on Saturday as the district administration announced a compensation of Rs 1.5 lakhs for the victim's family.
Inspector Shesh Narayan Shukla and constable Khetpal Singh have been caught while head constable Hargovind Verma is still absconding. "Efforts are on to nab him soon," said Senior Superintendent of Police A K Singh.
Bachole alias Umakant died in police custody on June 11. The district administration has now sanctioned a compensation of Rs 1.5 lakhs for his family. The deceased was a 22-year-old labourer and the sole bread earner for his family. He was in custody at Narwal police station for two days as the cops suspected him to have helped a couple elope.
Police initially said he had consumed poison and died on way to hospital. But the post-mortem report confirmed that he was beaten to death as his neck was broken.
The incident holds importance in the light of the fact that chief minister Mayawati on Wednesday itself told senior police officers in Lucknow that policemen in the districts were mishandling cases and harassing innocent people.
The case also comes at a time when the National Commission for Scheduled Castes said in a recent report that Uttar Pradesh has the worst track record across the country in terms of crimes against dalits.

Bad minority report has Maya fuming

NEW DELHI: With eyes firmly on the high-stake election season, Congress is moving to mount an assault on BSP chief Mayawati on her home turf of dalit and Muslim welfare.
Top constitutional panels on Thursday singled out Uttar Pradesh for "poor track record" on atrocities on dalits and Muslims — statements which left chief minister Mayawati squirming and hurling back charges of "political motive" at the national commissions for SCs and minorities.
With these panels a part of the Congress umbrella, headed by party insiders, the inescapable view is that the lead player of UPA is looking to fire from their shoulders to force the BSP to defend its fort and confine itself to Uttar Pradesh. National panel for SCs chairman Buta Singh, on a visit to Kaanti, a remote dalit-dominated village in Allahabad gripped by tension over purchase of land by a retired cop, said UP "continues to be at the top in atrocities against dalits in states". Coincidentally, National Commission for Minorities chief Mohammad Shafi Qureshi said in Lucknow that UP "tops in discrimination and atrocities on Muslims" and asked the state to take steps to restore faith of Muslims in the system.
With attacks on her "forte" on her own soil, Mayawati advised Singh against"misusing the constitutional body for political purposes" in a detailed reaction. The fight between Congress and BSP started after Mayawati made it clear that she would look to damage the former in its strongholds, prompting a rattled Congress to look for counter moves. Congress strategists felt that she would have to be attacked on her dalit politics to limit her to UP. It is argued that she cannot don the old firebrand dalit role because of her "sarvjan" slogan to win over upper castes. Party heir apparent Rahul Gandhi's visits to dalit households in UP and his potshots on the BSP regime have left the dalit outfit enraged.
The plan started unfolding when the national panel spotted a chink in Mayawati's armour in the "dilution" of SC atrocities law. While the chief minister had issued circulars to say that cases of rape and murder be registered under the stringent law only after preliminary probes confirmed the charges, Buta Singh cited the move as anti-dalit. The panel against found fault with the state's amendment as it called a directive to police to act against the complainants for filing false FIRs as a "subtle threat" to discourage SCs from reporting cases.

Three booked for harassing a Dalit

Fed up with the constant harassment and ostracism by her upper caste neighbours, a Dalit woman, on Wednesday registered a complaint with the Wadala Truck Terminal (WTT) police.
Chandravati Harijan, 33, a resident of Shanti Nagar at Antop Hill, in her complaint has accused her next door neighbours of throwing garbage at her doorstep and the backyard and also abusing her. The WTT police have booked three women, Gayatri Pandey, her daughter Kiran, and Faizobano, under sections of the Atrocities against Minorities Act.
“Every morning, there is garbage strewn around the house. Each time we step out, they taunt us on our caste,” said Mayadevi, 20, Chandravati’s daughter. Chandravati said that they have been at the receiving end of this kind of harassment since the last four years. “They also destroyed a portion of our wall, and when we tried to rebuild it, they broke it down again,” she said.
However, the Pandeys have refuted the allegations. “She is trying to illegally encroach on our property. And when we object, she plays her caste card and the police go soft on her,” said Gayatri Pandey. She added that the Harijans had also filed non-cognisable offences against her, which were aimed at maligning her image.
The police are recording the statements of other residents to ascertain if the allegations are true.

Source: DNAindia.com

Cops beat Dalit youth to death in UP, probe ordered

Kanpur, June 13: A few days after a Dalit woman was raped and murdered, relatives of a Dalit youth in Maharajganj locality in Kanpur are claiming that he was killed in police custody.
The victim, Bachchole alias Umakant, was summoned to Narwal police station after he was suspected to have eloped with a village girl.
Police initially said he had consumed poison and died on way to hospital. But the post-mortem report confirmed that he was beaten to death as his neck was broken.
Now the district administration has sacked three policemen -- Inspector Shesh Narayan Shukla, Head Constable Hargovind Verma and Constable Khetpal Singh. All three are on the run and authorities have filed an FIR against them.
“An inquiry has been ordered and the Additional City Magistrate has been asked to submit his report within a month.” said District Magistrate Anil Sagar.
Narwal police station officer Shyamlal Chowdhary has also been suspended.
The incident beats tall claims by Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati who recently said that she will not tolerate erring police officials.
The case comes a day after the National Commission for Scheduled Castes said in a report that Uttar Pradesh has the worst track record across the country in curbing police atrocities against Dalits.
Source: Expressindia.com

Condition of Dalits worst in UP: SC panel

Allahabad, June 12: In a virtual snub to the Mayawati government in Uttar Pradesh, the National Commission for Scheduled Castes on Thursday said the state had the "worst track record" across the country in terms of atrocities on Dalits.
"Uttar Pradesh continues to be at the top in terms of the number of cases of atrocities against Dalits reported in states across the country. The latest data available with us is for 2006 when the state recorded a whopping 52,827 such cases," chairman of the Commission Buta Singh told reporters here.
Singh was leading a three-member delegation which visited Kaanti, a remote Dalit-dominated village in the district that has been in the grip of tension for the past one week over the controversial purchase of a piece of land by a retired police personnel.
Singh claimed the depressed classes were being driven to the wall in the state "due to an unsympathetic administration which has scant respect for the constitutional provisions made for the weaker sections".
The former Union Minister, who asserted that his visit here was "totally apolitical", however, took potshots at Chief Minister Mayawati, saying "she apparently has no control over the administration and the police as a result of which her proclaimed commitment to the cause of the Dalits was now under scanner".
Strongly condemning the "brutal attack on women, children and old people" in Kaanti on January 7, when an attempt was made to get the land vacated with the help of local police, Singh however maintained that reports of injuries to a number of police personnel in retaliatory violence were "totally false".
Source: ZeeNews

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Dalit Woman, Newborn Die After Hospital Refuses Treatment


UTTAR PRADESH, INDIA (ANS) -- Maya Devi, a 28-year-old Dalit (“Untouchable”) woman, writhed in labor pains outside the maternity wing of the Kanpur Medical College as her sister and neighbor looked on helplessly April 23. Seven hours after doctors denied her treatment at the hospital in Uttar Pradesh, India, she gave birth to a baby boy. The baby died minutes after being born due to a lack of medical help.
According to a report by the Press Trust of India, the hospital’s chief superintendent and other doctors refused to touch Devi or provide her with medical treatment while she was in labor because of her caste.
Because Devi was a Dalit, most of the hospital staff considered her unsuitable to receive medical treatment.But Dr. Kiran Pandey, head of gynecology at the hospital, refused to let the social stigma of the caste system get in the way of caring for this “untouchable” mother.
Dr. Pandey was an hour away from the hospital when she found out about Devi’s situation. She rushed back as quickly as she could and brought the unconscious mother into the intensive care unit. But for all Dr. Pandey’s efforts, Devi died the following day after a series of heart attacks.
Because Devi was a Dalit, most of the hospital staff considered her unsuitable to receive medical treatment. Dalits belong to the lowest group on the caste social ladder and are seen as less than human in Indian society. Because of their position, people belonging to the upper castes fear making contact with them. Despite the fact that the caste system was outlawed more than 50 years ago, it continues to have a strong hold on much of Indian life. Throughout the country, Dalits are still systematically abused and work as virtual slaves. They are constantly told they have no value.
Very often, those who abuse the Dalits get away with their crimes. Fortunately in Devi’s case, nine doctors have been suspended for refusing to offer treatment in her time of need.
The state’s chief minister, Mayawati, expressed deep sorrow over the infant’s death by announcing financial assistance to Devi's family, but no amount of money could ease the pain of Devi’s death.
Now, thanks to Gospel for Asia’s missionaries, Dalits are experiencing a sense of hope and a renewed awakening that they are worthy of love. They are amazed to find out from the missionaries that Jesus Christ loves them and died for them.
GFA missionaries in Uttar Pradesh ask for continued prayers for their work among the Dalit people and throughout India.
Source: godrev.com

One man's mission to rid India of its dirtiest job

Even though manual scavenging was banned in India in 1993, thousands still perform the task of cleaning, by hand, human waste.
By Mian Ridge
Alwar, India - Usha Chaumar, a gregarious 40-something with an enormous grin, can pinpoint the exact day she stopped being one of the "untouchables," the Hindu caste that was supposedly abolished in 1950.
It was 2003, and Ms. Chaumar was on her way to work when Bindeshwar Pathak stopped her. She recalls being amazed that a "nicely dressed" man would even speak with someone like her: a manual scavenger. As such, it was her job to clean human waste, by hand, from homes that lack flushing toilets in this dusty town in the state of Rajasthan.
Usually, neighbors crossed the street when they saw her coming with the tools of her trade: a metal pan and wire brush. And even when she had finished her gut-churning work and scrubbed her body clean, she was treated as a pariah.
But Dr. Pathak asked her why she covered her face with her shawl and why she seemed ashamed to talk to him. At the time, Chaumar had no idea she was speaking to the man whose mission it was to end manual scavenging and who would eventually change her life.
Pathak founded an organization called Sulabh in 1970 to eradicate the practice by replacing unplumbed toilets with affordable flush ones, and by giving scavengers training for other jobs.
"Shopkeepers would drop the rice to me – they wouldn't touch me," Chaumar remembers, losing her smile for a moment. "And they made me put my money down, away from them. They threw water over it before taking it."
Today, she earns a living selling homemade pickles and embroidered cloths.
Manual scavenging was banned in India in 1993, by a law that forbids the construction of dry toilets and requires existing ones to be destroyed. But in India, such laws tend to be implemented slowly. There are thought to be several hundred thousand manual scavengers still working; a recent report found there were over 1,000 in Delhi alone.
Sulabh has built 1.2 million affordable hygienic toilets throughout India and helped 60,000 former manual scavengers move into other jobs.
All those jobs are held by members of the Valmiki community, a substratum of the Dalit caste – formerly known as untouchable – at the bottom of the ancient Hindu caste system. The term untouchable – along with, theoretically, the stigma attached to it – was made illegal by India's Constitution in 1950.
In Alwar, in 2003, Pathak set up a retraining program for the town's manual scavengers which has given more than 50 women vocational training. The center, where women learn to read and write, make clothes, and train as beauticians, is housed in a prosperous area of Alwar.
"At first they felt uncomfortable coming here, but we wanted to give them a different perspective," says Suman Chahar, who runs the center.
In one room, Lalita Nanda is making wicks for oil lamps in Hindu temples. The priests who buy them did not let Lalita into the temple until recently, she says, smiling.
One of the first things Pathak did with Alwar's scavengers was usher them into the town's biggest Hindu temple. He also took a group out to dinner at the Maurya Sheraton, a five-star hotel in Delhi.
The manager was so appalled he tried to stop the women entering. Pathak promised to pay for anything that was broken or stolen; nothing, of course, was; and as the party left, the manager apologized to them.
Sulabh's transformation of manual scavengers would not be possible without the other part of its work, the development of cheap hygienic toilet technology.
"The toilet is a tool of social change," declares Pathak, who defies the stereotype of the scruffy Gandhian activist dressed in rough-spun cotton. He is wearing, instead, a starched white pajama suit with a smart jacket; his hair is dyed black, and he wears a fine gold ring.
Born into a family of Brahmins – the highest of all the castes - in a village in Bihar, Pathak remembers, as a little boy, being intrigued by the notion that the ordinary-looking woman who sold kitchen utensils to his family could be "untouchable."
"So I touched her," he says, "Just to see. And my grandmother made me drink a mixture of cow urine, cow dung, and Ganges water." That combination is meant as both cleanser and punishment.
Later, Pathak joined a committee established to celebrate the centennial of Mahatma Gandhi's birth. During this period he was struck by what Mr. Gandhi had said about scavengers: "I may not be born again, but if it happens I will like to be born into a family of scavengers, so that I may relieve them of the inhuman, unhealthy, and hateful practice of carrying night soil."
Curious, Pathak went to live in a community of scavengers for three months. At this point, he says, he was not yet inspired by their cause. But two experiences changed this.
The first, he says, was when he saw a newly married girl being forced by her mother-in-law to clean human waste by hand. "I can't describe how awful her crying was," he says. The second was when he saw a small boy being attacked by a bull. People rushed to save him, but when someone cried out that he came from the Valamiki caste, they left him, and he was killed.
"These things still happen," says Pathak. "But we have everything we need to change things. It is so, so simple, if people only have the will."

SC panel to visit Kanti village

Allahabad, June 11 A team from the National Commission for Scheduled Castes is arriving at Allahabad on Thursday to probe the Kanti village incident.
Over two-dozen people, four of them police officers, had sustained injuries in a clash between the police and a group of villagers belonging to the Dalit community on Saturday.
Senior police officers of the district have been asked to appear before the commission.
It was learnt that the Chairman of National Commission for SC, Dr Buta Singh, and four members will visit the village and talk to the affected people. According to information, the team — led by its chairman — has received a complaint against the police brutality and highhandedness. The members will also meet the injured women who were hospitalised after the clash.
This has sent alarms bells ringing in high levels of the police department and the administration, sources said.
The Ghoorpur police - allegedly in collusion with the agents of Al-Mehmood Education Society -- had gone to Chota Kanti village to force the Dalits to vacate the land reportedly purchased by Ram Awadh Pasi and the Society. The cops allegedly threatened the people and even thrashed an elderly person who opposed them. This led to the clash. Over a dozen Dalit women — one of them was pregnant — and 12 men fell victim to the police fury.
Source: Expressindian.com

Casteism raises head, cremation stopped


FEROZEPUR: Many in the country face the evil of caste-based discrimination in their lives. But in case of a Dalit woman in Bholuwala village, it continued even after she died. The dominant Jat Sikhs of the village did not let Dalit families cremate the body of Gurdial Kaur, 75, at the common cremation ground on Tuesday. She had died on Monday.
Jat Sikhs of the village allegedly threw out the pyre wood from the cremation ground following which the situation got tense. District administration sent the local executive magistrate and SHO of Ghal Khurd police station to the spot to diffuse the tension and persuade the Dalits to cremate the body at a vacant land in the village late on Tuesday afternoon.
According to sources, some Jat Sikh families had filed a case some time back to prevent Dalits from using the common cremation ground of the village, but the court had issued a stay order in favour of the Dalits pending a final decision. However, Jat Sikhs of the village claimed they hadn't received any such orders from the court.
They said Dalits had been given a separate piece of land, measuring about one kanal, for use as cremation ground for the last many years. Jagtar Singh, a resident of the village belonging to the dominating caste said Dalits had unnecessarily raised this issue at the behest of some local politicians to create tension.
Some people said similar tension had gripped the village when a Dalit man Gurdial Singh had died. That issue was resolved peacefully. Caste-based discrimination has deep roots in the village, which actually has two separate gurdwaras for the two communities. Dalit residents of the village alleged that being a minority and a financially depressed community, they were being discriminated against by the influential Jat Sikhs of the village.
Source: TOI 12/06/08

Dalit mother, daughter stripped in Ajmer



Rajan Mahan
Thursday, June 12, 2008 (Ajmer)
In a horrific reminder of caste brutalities in Rajasthan, a teenage Dalit girl and her mother were thrashed and stripped by some upper caste men in a village in Ajmer.

Their crime to deserve such treatment was that Phooli Bai resisted two Jat men, who wanted to forcibly take away her 16-year-old daughter, Ramkanya on Monday evening.

The angry men then humiliated the Dalit women in full public view of the village.Besides thrashing them, Phooli Bai said that they were stripped in full public view at Sihaar village in Ajmer.Phooli Bai said, ''They tore off my daughter's clothes and tried to drag her outside our home. When I tried to save her, they tore off my clothes also. They not only beat us badly but also shamed us in front of the whole village.''The tormentors even threw out the Dalit family from the village, threatening them with worse punishment if they told their plight to anyone.Since Tuesday the frightened Dalit family is sitting at the office of the Deputy Superintendent of police in Ajmer's Kekri town and they refuse to go back to their village for fear of losing their lives. Satya Narayan Kamad, Phooli Bai's husband said, ''As we have complained against them, our fear is that they will kill us. They won't spare us now.''The two Jat men are identified as Bannalal Dhakad and Jasraj Dhakad, who have now fled.

Most villagers claim that they don't know anything about the incident but the police have registered a case under the Prevention of Atrocities against SC/ST Act.Sarita Singh, Dy SP at Kekri said, ''The case from the Dalit family of Satyanarain Kamad has been registered under Section 323, section 341 and 354 IPC and under the SC/ST Act.

We are investigating the matter.'' Meanwhile the Dalit family remains petrified and their alleged tormentors continue to abscond.This tragedy is a grim reminder of how deep caste lines run in rural Rajasthan, even 60 years after independence.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

52-year-old Dalit woman, daughter stripped in public


AJMER: In what reminds of gory tales of the feudal medieval India, a 52-year-old Dalit woman, Dhuli Devi and her 15-year-old daughter Ramkanya were stripped in full public view at Sayar village under Sarwar tehsil in the district on Monday evening. The eight-member family was assaulted and thrown out of the village. Reason: Dhuli and her family members resisted a few powerful Jat co-villagers, when they tried to take away Ramkanya forcibly. Thrown out of village, the tormented family members with six children had been sitting in front of the office of the deputy superintendent of police in Sarwar since then. So frightened is the family that they have refused to go back to village, considering it more unsafe after they had approached the police. Head of the family, Satnarayan Kamad, rues: "We can’t go back as none is there to help us and people will kill us." The police have registered a case against the two accused identified as Banalal Dhakad and Jasraj Dakad under Sections 323 and 333 of the IPC and the duo is still at large. The police is reported to be shying away from taking action against the accused. "I went to the village and spoke to people, who have agreed to let the family come back to the village," said Dy SP Sarita Singh, while talking to TOI on Tuesday. She said that she had no powers to slap Prevention of Atrocities against SC/ST Act on the miscreants and it could be done only after taking approval of the district police chief. "I have submitted the report to the SP and waiting for his further orders," she added. Ajmer SP Anand Srivastava said that he had just come back from violence-hit Bayana in Bharatpur district and was not aware of the case exactly. "Let me find out. If guilty, none will be spared," he assured. With torn blouses, baniyans and tops, the Dalit family continues sitting in front of the DySP’s office and refuses to move until security assurance is given. "The two persons, who beat us up, insulted my girls and wife and tried to take away my daughter are still moving freely around and they will once again react," feared Dhuli. He said that even the police reacted only after he approached the senior officials.
Source: TOI

Ironical indemnification

Political class "implements" SC verdict in Uttaranchal
VB Rawat Delhi
Justice Shivraj V Patil and Justice Dharmadhikari delivered a historical verdict in end-February 2004. This decision troubled the political class because of its implications for other land-grabbing cases. Political leaders have benami lands in the Tarai region of Uttaranchal, where the land ceiling act was never implemented.
The verdict followed the petition filed by PN Mehta, director M/s Escorts Farms Ltd, Kashipur, who challenged the land ceiling imposed on him by the state of Uttar Pradesh (UP) in 1990. The Supreme Court not only rejected various claims made by Mehta but also made it clear that land grabbers cannot be granted any permission to stay more and no compensation should be provided to them. For two years the Uttaranchal government just sat on the order and did nothing.
This case was revived by 150 dalit families led by retired Subedar Jasram who sought constitutional remedy for those who were mercilessly evicted from Ambedkarnagar village, a locality they created at the Escort Farms. The successive UP governments and later Uttaranchal government were not at all interested in this case as it would have created problems for the large number of illegal land grabbers in the region who happen to be Sikhs.
In fact, the issue of Udham Singh Nagar district got communalised as these political leaders jumped into the fray suggesting that the Sikhs are being victimised. In the second week of January, the trucks of Uttaranchal Police came and demolished the entire habitat at the Escorts Farms Ltd. The area became tense as Sikhs protested against this demolition, which they termed as illegal. Political parties particularly the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) were quick to call for immediate stoppage to the demolition drive in the area. A group of Punjab politicians also visited the area condemning the Uttaranchal government's action.
Unfortunately, in this din, very few tried to understand as to why the area was demolished and if Uttaranchal government was really sincere in its approach. Immediately after the noise created by BJP and Sikh groups, the government of Uttaranchal formed a committee and decided to give plots to the Sikhs in addition to a very hefty compensation. Uttaranchal government claims to implement the Supreme Court Judgment even while it has redistributed the same land to the same people. It is interesting to note that these Sikhs were specially brought from Punjab by the Mehtas to make their case stronger in the Supreme Court and communalise the entire issue as Sikh versus Pahadi while it was a simple case of land ceiling act being imposed.
Mehta had sold this land to various individuals from Punjab without any registered papers even when Allahabad High Court had passed strictures against him. The struggle of dalits to get land in this region came a cropper. Upper caste Sikhs are pretending to be the victims while the dalits today remain isolated. The dalits did not go to the Maoists for help. The dalit families also include dalit Sikhs of the region.
Over 1,128 acre land acquired by M/s Escorts Farms Ltd was declared illegal by the Commissioner of Nainital, Nand Kishore Arya in the early 1990s. M/s Escorts Farms Ltd went to Allahabad High Court against this order and contested the claim under creation of fake cooperatives and groups. Allahabad High Court gave an adverse judgment against Mehta, asking the state to impose a fine of Rs 1 lakh on him for "enjoying the fruits of surplus land".
Today, the issue has become communalised as political parties have jumped into an entirely administrative issue. The land grabbers have found new sympathisers in political parties and the state is doling out its funds and money to them. Officers of Uttaranchal government are sitting in Kashipur and ensuring that the Supreme Court's verdict is "implemented". So by demolishing the area, they have "implemented" the Supreme Court's judgment and by redistributing the land along with a handsome package, opportunist political leaders have ensured that their vote bank remains intact. It is reported that an amount of Rs 61 lakh was paid all the "victims" apart from promising 3.5 acres of land to 103 families who had less than 5 acre of land. It is reported that there were 251 families living in the area.
The Uttaranchal government has produced a great example for their counterparts in Delhi and Maharastra where politicians are finding it difficult to implement the demolition orders. They can also demolish houses of land grabbers and provide compensation to "victims". This will ensure that courts are also happy and people also remain loyal to their leaders.
The author is a human rights activist

Dalit women crank camera to showcase life

Gargi Parsai
Films on sustaining agricultural biodiversity and livelihoods launched



— Photo: V. Sudershan
(From left) Swaroopamma, Sooramma and Masanagiri Narsamma from

Andhra Pradesh during the launch of Multimedia Publication’s Rural Images and Voices on Food Sovereignty in South India, in New Delhi on Monday.
NEW DELHI: What began as a means of sustenance for poor farmer women, many of them Dalits, in the Telangana region of Andhra Pradesh has over the years developed into a powerful tool for their empowerment to address the issues of sovereignty over land, traditional seeds, nutritious food, natural resources, traditional knowledge, education and health.

More importantly, the women from 80 villages in Medak district, who came together to form grass-roots Sanghams, stepped out of the shadow of ignorance and intimidation and carved for themselves a niche in the challenging area of multi-media. They now wield their own movie/video cameras to tell their stories in their own manner and language.

They have not only turned back to sowing traditional and nutritious coarse cereals in their semi-arid lands but also developed an alternative Public Distribution System that is just, fair and participatory.

Under the banner of the Community Media Trust, the collective of women farmers from the State, launched their multimedia publication here on Monday. Titled ‘Affirming Life and Diversity: Rural Images and Voices on Food Sovereignty,’ the series comprises films that emerged from an action research project on sustaining local food systems, agricultural biodiversity and livelihoods supported by the International Institute for Environment and Development, United Kingdom.

The Community Media Trust, affiliated to the Deccan Development Society, was created to document the struggle, the images and the voices of rural women. Society director P.V. Satheesh said the 12 video films made by the mostly illiterate women, who were given a six-month training, traced the experience of women in regaining their autonomy over food production, seeds, natural resources, and markets.

At an interactive session here, Masanagiri Narasamma, 35, related how the community-led PDS taught the women to revive locally-grown sorghum and millets and create local systems of storage, and reach out to the most vulnerable in society.

As if to prove a point, Ms. Narasamma took out her video camera and shot the proceedings of the interactive session. Even while she was on the dais, she continued to shoot the session.
“I am a seed-keeper. I store a variety of valuable seeds in baskets in my house and with them, the knowledge of farming, environment and life. Since I learnt to use the camera, I am storing the knowledge of my communities on film and interpreting them for the world,” said Sooramma, who is in her late 40’s.

Ms. Narasamma, a Dalit, said they were not allowed entry into temples and rich homes earlier. “But now even the rich allow us to touch them to pin the lapel-mike on them for a video-shoot.” While continuing with their collective, the women now plan to replicate their on-farm and off-farm activities and show the way to the world through their films.

Non-dalit changes surname to get scholarship


BAGLUNG, June 9: A non-Dalit student here has changed his surname as a Dalit to get an Indian embassy scholarship allocated for Dalit students. Shankar Gautam of Baskot in Sigana VDC-4 changed his surname to Bishwokarma and got his name selected for the Indian embassy’s scholarship to study a bachelor’s level course. Shankar is the son of Hari Prasad Gautam, who is a university teacher at Mahendra Multiple Campus in Baglung. Meanwhile, it has been revealed that VDC secretary Lal Bahadur KC had written a recommendation letter, saying that Shankar Bishwokarma was a labourious Dalit student and his father’s annual income was a mere Rs 50,500. KC denied making fraudulent documents proving Shankar’s surname as Bishwokarma. He said he only proved the income source of Gautam.
However, Dalit Commission’s president Ram Lal BK said the commission certified Shankar as a Dalit student, based on KC’s recommendation letter. The photocopy of KC’s recommendation received by this correspondent clearly mentions Shankar’s surname as Bishwokarma and portrays him as a Dalit student. The embassy provides four scholarships to Dalit students among the 10 scholarship it provides annually for students across the country to study BE and MBBS studies. General Secretary of Dalit Sewa Sangh Chakaraman Bishwokarma said Shankar’s name has been selected for the scholarship. Because of this, genuine Dalit candidate Raj Kumar BK of Bardia, who is also from a squatter family, could not make it to the scholarship after falling behind Shankar by 0.5 points in the ranking. After the revelation, coordinator of the Society of Dalit and Oppressed Communities Govinda Nepali is set to file a case against KC for fraud. Shankar’s father Hari Prasad said he had requested the VDC to write a recommendation for scholarship for his son as a poor and labourious student. On query how his son’s name was selected for scholarship under Dalit’s quota, Gautam said, “Neither had I asked the VDC for recommendation to prove my son as a Dalit nor I know anything more about it”.Meanwhile, in Baglung, seventy-seven students belonging to poor family and reading at Shivalaya Primary School located at Bhimpokhara VDC, Ward No. 9 of the district were provided various materials by the HEFAR Nepal, Amrita Women’s Group and the school family.Each student was provided the materials- pen, pencil, copy, eraser, soap, bucket, jug, nail-clipper- worth Rs 500.Meanwhile, the dalit communities here have set up a Dalit Awareness Centre.
The Centre runs the informal classes on burning issues as dalit rights, inclusion, human rights, and social justice in the local level.Both men and women around the places gather here at evening to discuss on the issuesIn Makwanpur, the District Education Office (DEO) in Makwanpur is set to provide 19 relief quotas to all the primary schools, which have not been handed over to the community, by mid-July.With the decision of the District Education Committee, relief quotas of 19 teachers comprising 10 women would be provided citing the number of students and teachers, said Acting District Education Officer Him Sharma.
Source: Gorkhapatra

Mob parades dalit’s corpse after lynching him

Patna, June 10 (IANS) Residents of a Bihar village lynched a man on suspicion that he was a thief and then paraded around the village displaying his body, the police said Tuesday. Dharmendra Nat and Pradip Dom, both dalits, were beaten with bricks and sticks by a mob in Anantkamtol village in Muzaffarpur district, about 80 km from here, Monday. The villagers claimed to have caught the men while they were fleeing a house after stealing valuables.
Nat died of the beatings and Dom was taken to a primary health care centre in a critical condition.
“Nat and Dom were brutally beaten by a mob Monday. The villagers alleged that they were trying to flee after stealing. Nat died on the spot and Dom was seriously injured,” Muzaffarpur Superintendent of Police Sudhansu Kumar told IANS on telephone.
After killing Nat, the mob took out a procession and paraded the victim’s body. They told the police that they didn’t regret killing him since he was a thief.
The police have registered a case, but have not named any suspect yet.
Over 40 cases of lynching were reported from Bihar villages last year. One of the most shocking incidents occurred in September 2007 when 10 men from the backward Kueri community were beaten to death in Vaishali district on the suspicion that they were thieves. Later, a high-level probe found that the lynched men had been innocent anyway.

Farmers await labourers at Sirhind Railway station

Fatehgarh Sahib (PTI): Though as per the Punjab government instructions, the farmers have started planting paddy from today but peasants are finding it hard to cultivate the crop as number of labourers coming from Uttar Pradesh and Bihar have dwindled.
Punjabi landlords are reluctant to hire local Dalit labourers as they charge more and it is also felt that their output is less as compared to those from Bihar or Uttar Pradesh.
Now the farmers are even ready to offer wine to labourers.
Farmers from adjoining areas have seen today to make a beeline outside the Sirhind railway station of district Fatehgarh Sahib in order to get hold of migrant labourers arriving here.
Some of the farmers are camping at the railway station for the past couple of days in hope of hiring them in advance so that they can start paddy cultivation on right time as per the government instructions, sources said.
Gurjit Singh of Tarkhan Majra said he had been coming to the railway station from last week but he had not able to hire anyone.
A leader of Farmers Union said that to cultivate one acre four labourers are needed. Many farmers with acres of land have not been able to get even a single labourer this sowing season.

Source: The Hindu

Monday, June 9, 2008

Time is with Dalits


With the dawn of the new millennium, three new developments have started in India and all are linked closely. First, liberalisation has boosted industrialisation. Second, due to this, several caste neutral occupations have come into being. Third, India is experiencing largescale urbanisation.
All the new developments are poised against the caste order. Agrarianism is home to the caste order as the system came into being in such a set up. By definition, urban India is a new territory, and the caste order cannot function as effectively as it does in agrarian India. It is not that Hindus, who dominate the caste order, wish to abandon the system. For them, life is uneasy without the hierarchical caste order. However, as the saying goes, "If wishes were horses.." Urbanisation fights the caste order system on its own without any person's efforts and, therefore, Dalits, who settle in such an atmosphere, experience great relief.
But, considering the educational qualifications of Dalits, where would they be able to fit in the new economy and urban centres? Even their economic conditions are not favourable raising a question about them gaining entry into the emerging markets. As Governments are no more interested in integrating Dalits in the new economy, how would they be able to turn industrialisation and urbanisation in their favour?
There are two situations that favour Dalits. First, the urban economy creates certain opportunities that the traditionally dominant caste members do not embrace. All such opportunities are better than working for landlords in rural and suburban areas. For instance, in the past year, over a million new vehicles started plying on Indian roads. This means, a million new jobs of drivers and another million as their assistants. There are hundreds of such occupations that do not require any educational degree but only manpower. This is an opportunity that Dalits can cash on.
In the second situation, Dalits hold little land and have insignificant assets in rural areas. This gives them the freedom of migrating to urban areas instead of being tied to the agrarian centres. Not only do urban areas give them livelihood, they also save them from undergoing humiliation that they face otherwise in rural areas.
Urban centres are the greatest educators. Dalits, who migrate to such places, refuse to return to their native places and make trips only to visit family members and relatives. Even the newfound 'affluence' is demonstrated during such visits. By working in urban centres they realise the meaning of dignity and freedom. They see a new employee-employer relationship that is more democratic than what exists in the countryside. There have been a number of instances in villages I have visited, where urban Dalit youths have entered in a conflict with dominant castes.
Such Dalit youths can no longer tolerate offensive social conducts of their ex-landlords. They instead inspire their family members, relatives and community members to assert. In my judgment, no social movement makes Dalits as assertive as the experience in living in urban centres.
However, mere urbanisation is not enough as most Dalits would just land in low-paying jobs. A new campaign is needed in which the urban Dalit-proletariats ought to prepare future generations to acquire necessary education and professional skills to succeed in the new economy, with the most important being learning English and other soft skills.
The major question is, who will carry this message to Dalits who work in urban centres? Since 1990, when I left the university to work amongst Dalits, I have seen all energies, resources and time being wasted in preparing memorandums to be submitted to Governments. Not many Dalit politicians, activists, or scholars can claim a major right they have won for the community -- except probably the Supplier Diversity programme conceived in the Bhopal Conference. Dalits, since 1990, have not been able to even protect rights won by Baba Saheb Dr Ambedkar.
Even though time is on Dalits' side, their leadership is clueless. The Dalit movement is not certain which direction it needs to go, even ideologically.
(By Chandrabhan Prashad)
Source: the pioneer

Loan without collateral for SC, ST entrepreneurs

The Hindu
HYDERABAD: The State government has decided to ensure that banks provide loans up to Rs. 5 crore without collateral security to interested entrepreneurs from the under-privileged communities for their ventures.
The government, through the AP State Finance Corporation (SFC), will stand guarantee to the applicants for loans sought by Dalit and tribal entrepreneurs.
Besides, it was decided to provide subsidy up to a maximum of Rs. 50 lakh in the form of a grant to the entrepreneurs and a provision of Rs. 2,500 crore had been made in the budget towards this end.

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Dalits face boycott in village


LACHRU KHURD: The victory of a Dalit in the recent panchayat elections has cost all Dalits of this village dearly. Being the fifth member of the panchayat, the vote of a Dalit, Sardara Singh, was the deciding factor for the post of sarpanch. His refusal to vote in favour of SAD candidate has led to the boycott of all Dalits by landlords. There are 248 votes in this village but only 225 villagers exercised their franchise and elected three Congress candidates Gurmeet Kaur, Tirlochan Singh and Sardara Singh and two SAD candidates Baljit Kaur and Nirmal Kaur. Jasmer Singh Lachru, an Shiromani Gurdwara Prabandhak Committee (SGPC) member and circle president of the SAD who belongs to this village, allegedly started pressurizing Sardara Singh to vote in favour of his party to save his reputation. "Jasmer Singh has been pressurizing me to vote for his party. But when I did not surrender he through public address system of the village gurdwara announced our boycott last week and since then we are being socially boycotted by them," Sardara Singh, who has gone into hiding fearing police action, told the The Times Of India over phone from an unknown place. After the alleged announcement no landlord was allowing their entry into their fields and had allegedly blocked many passages to the houses of Dalits. Many Dalit women, who worked as domestic help, had lost jobs for no fault of theirs. "Though I have nothing to do with any panchayat member, my landlords denied me work on Monday because I am a Dalit," said Daropadi. The late-night raids at the houses of Dalits and Congress supporters by the Ghanaur police has terrorized Dalits. Fearing thrashing at the hands of the police all family members of Sardara Singh and two other Congress supporters have gone into hiding. "It's our land and we could prevent anyone from entering," Lachru, a landlord said. Former Congress minister Jasjit Singh Randhawa said they would start an agitation if the police didn't take action.

Dalit woman burnt alive over water dispute
NDTV.com - New Delhi,India

Abdul Samad
Friday, June 6, 2008 (Harda)
A Dalit family was protesting for hours at the Harda district collectorate in Madhya Pradesh but no one was ready to hear them out.Their 55-year-old family member Prema Bai was allegedly burnt alive by her Dalit neighbours after an altercation over who would fill water first from the only hand pump in the locality.''My mother had a fight over filling water. The neighbours and the villagers poured kerosene over her and burnt her,'' says Prema's daughter Purnima.The families of the accused and the victim have a long history of rivalry and have often fought over water. The police haven't filed an FIR yet. It was only after the protest that they ordered an inquiry. ''We are investigating the case on the basis of the family's complaint. Action will be taken once the inquiry is over,'' says Abhishek Rajan, SDPO, Harda.With water becoming more and more scarce in the entire state, fight over it is becoming a day-to-day affair

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Various positions @ IIDS

1. Senior Fellows (equivalent to Professor)
Qualification and Experience: Ph.D. in any discipline of Social Sciences (Economics/Political Science/Sociology/Anthropology) with at least ten years of research/teaching experience and publications in reputed journals in the relevant field.
2. Fellows (equivalent to Associate Professor)
Qualification and Experience: Ph.D. in any discipline of social Sciences (Economics/Political Sciences/Sociology/Anthropology) with at least 6 years of research/teaching experience and publications in reputed journals in the relevant field.
3. Associate Fellows (equivalent to Assistant Professor)
Qualification and Experience: Ph.D. in any discipline of Social Sciences (Economics/Political Sciences /Sociology/Anthropology)
4. Research Associates
Qualification and Experience:M.Phil/Ph.D in any discipline of social sciences (Economics/ Political Sciences /Sociology /Anthropology) with a willingness to work in the areas of our concern.
5. Visiting Researchers: Short term fellowships for researcher from India and abroad to work on the areas of our concern.
Last date: 20 June 2008

Please mail your CV to admin@dalitstudies.org.in ORPost at the following address:
Administrative CoordinatorQ-3, Green Park Extension, New Delhi - 110016.

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

‘Don’t discriminate Hilly & Terai dalits’

LAHAN, June 2: Speakers at a programme organized here on Saturday blamed the National Dalit Commission that it discriminated Lohar people belonging to the Madhesi dalits in a number of 60,000.
They blamed the Commission while speaking at the First District Gathering of Bishwokarma Lohar Sewa Committee. The concerned experts should include the rights of Lohar dalits in the constitution, they demanded.
Moreover, they raised grave concern over government’s discriminatory eye to the Terai Lohar as they are not called dalits while the same lohar (kamis) are dalits in hilly region.
Terai Lohar should be identified as dalits, they reiterated.
Speakers at the programme were Central Treasurer of Dalit Indigenous Party, Dille Mijar, Dr Sita Ram Raya, Laxman Thakur, Syam Sharma, Raj Kishor Sharma, Ram Bhagat Thakur and Prahlad Sharma among others.
Some 100 Lohar people from Siraha, Saptari, Dhanusha, Sarlahi and Sunsari districts had participated in the gathering.
Issuing a press release the Committee warned of waging nation-wide protest if the Teari Lohar were not treated as hilly Lohar (kamis).
Source : Gorkhapatra

Dalit youth beaten to death in Moga

Times of India - IndiaMOGA: A dalit youth was allegedly beaten to death by some youths in Budh Singh Wala village of Moga district on Saturday evening when he objected to lewd remarks being made by the accused against his family women.
The deceased's younger brother who managed to escape from the spot also sustained serious injuries and was admitted in civil hospital.
In a complaint to the police, the injured Balwinder Singh alleged some youths in the village beat his married brother Nirmal Singh to death when he raised objection to their indecent behaviour.
Though, earlier also there was a verbal dispute between the deceased and the accused, the matter was pacified after interference by the village panchayat, he told.
However on Saturday, the youths attacked Nirmal Singh along with his brother and beat them up mercilessly.
The police have registered a case and searching for the accused. There has been a lot of resentment in people.

Christians take Dalit rights demands to Delhi

Indian Catholic - New Delhi,IndiaHYDERABAD, India (UCAN) -- Christian leaders in Andhra Pradesh state plan to take trainloads of demonstrators to the national capital to demand equal rights for Christian dalit. "We have come to a stage of now or never. Hence, the need of showing our strength," explained Father Anthoniraj Thumma, secretary of Andhra Pradesh Federation of Churches (APFC), an ecumenical forum.
The priest was one of about 50 Christian leaders who gathered on May 29 in Hyderabad, the state capital, 1,500 kilometers south of New Delhi, to make arrangements for the protest.
They plan to bring at least 10,000 people in four or five trainloads to New Delhi to demonstrate in July. Travel expenses for each 25-coach train are estimated at 2.5 million rupees (about US$58,500).
The Christian leaders say July is the "right time," because parliament meets then for its monsoon session. They plan to gather at the Jantar Mantar lawns, a popular government-owned venue for public demonstrations and strikes near Parliament House. The lawns draw hundreds of activists and others year-round from throughout the country.
The Church in India has fought for statutory benefits for dalit Christians for the past six decades. Dalit, a collective term, designates people at the bottom of India's caste system, once called "untouchables."
The constitution grants special provisions to help dalit advance economically and socially. The benefits include government job quotas, free education and seat quotas in the federal and state legislatures.
Initially, lawmakers implemented the benefits only for Hindu dalit, but the government amended the constitution twice to extend them to Sikhs and Buddhists. Christians and Muslims are still excluded under the pretext that their religions do not recognize caste. An estimated 60 percent of India's 25 million Christians are from low-caste backgrounds.
In 2004, the federal government created the National Commission for Religious and Linguistic Minorities to study the socioeconomic situation of Christian and Muslim dalit. It recommended reserving 10 percent of government jobs for Muslim dalit and 5 percent for the other dalit, including Christians, who are not Hindus. The government has not implemented that recommendation.
APFC executive secretary B. Danam said the national commission and Supreme Court favor the Christian demand. "Decks are cleared for the government to introduce the bill. Since the government is still dilly-dallying, there is need to put political pressure," he urged.
The meeting asked participants to meet all 42 members of parliament from Andhra Pradesh and explain to them the reasons for granting the Christian demand. It also called on the Indian Catholic bishop's commission that deals with dalit and tribal affairs to raise about 20 million rupees (about US$470,000) for the protest program.
J.D. Seelam, a Christian parliamentarian, told the meeting all political parties except the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party (Indian people's party) have given written support for the dalit Christian cause. Harsh Kumar, another Christian parliamentarian, added that the federal government appears to view the matter favorably, so this is the right time to apply pressure.
Father Thumma said his federation has taken the initiative to get a letter of recommendation from Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and to Sonia Gandhi, chairperson of the United Progressive Alliance, which rules the federal government.
APFC president Reverend B.P. Sugandhar, highest official of the Church of South India as its moderator, told the gathering they are fighting for "a just cause and not begging for any favor from the government."
Most Catholics in Andhra Pradesh, a state with 76 million people, are of dalit origin. Church people estimate more than 80 percent of the state's 1.81 million Christians come from socially and economically disadvantaged groups.

Minority Commission to submit report on Dalit Christians

Indian Catholic - New Delhi,IndiaNEW DELHI (ICNS): India’s apex National Minorities Commission (NMC) will soon submit its assessment to the government on the controversial issue of granting Scheduled Caste status to Dalit Christians and Muslims. Dalit Christians and Muslims in the country have not been given educational benefits despite several representations to the government in the last few decades.
Recently, the NMC recently commissioned a study on the plight of Dalit Christians. It came up with strong recommendation for granting scheduled caste status for Dalit Muslims and Christians on the lines of Dalit Hindus, Sikhs and Buddhists.
In the wake of this recommendation, the Human Resources Development Ministry has now asked the NMC to present its case to the government as early as possible.
The HRD Ministry has also asked the NMC to take up the case with the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment which had earlier expressed some reservations on the issue, saying it would affect the 15% quota for Dalit Hindus.
The NMC study had looked into the contemporary status of Dalit Muslims and Dalit Christians in terms of their material well-being and social status. It had categorically stated that there was a strong case for including Dalit Muslims and Dalit Christians in the Scheduled Caste category.
The study said that there were compelling arguments in favour of such an inclusion based on principles of natural justice and fairness. "The balance of pragmatic considerations is also in favour of their inclusion. According due statutory recognition to Dalit Muslims and Dalit Christians would not only right a wrong, it would also remove an indefensible anomaly in our politico-legal system that can legitimately be construed as discriminatory,” it had pointed out.
“In most social contexts, they are Dalits first and Muslims and Christians only second,” it added.

New statue of India's Dalit icon

BBC News - UK
A new life-size statue of the chief minister of the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh has replaced an earlier one put up just six weeks ago.
The old statue of Mayawati was removed by crane at midnight in the state capital, Lucknow.
Mayawati is an icon for millions of Dalits or "untouchables" as they used to be known earlier.
She is known for her obsession with statues - of past Dalit leaders and also her own.
Statues of political leaders are generally put up posthumously, but Ms Mayawati defends the installation of her statues in her lifetime saying the belief is "outdated".
Marginally different
Weighing 18 tonnes, the new statue is heavier and taller than the earlier one.
The BBC's Ram Dutt Tripathi in Lucknow says its facial features are marginally different and a shoulder bag has been added to the statue to give it a more professional look.
"Madam did not like the face and body of her earlier statue so we are putting up a new one on her orders," an engineer involved in the project said.
The earlier statue was inaugurated with much fanfare in the middle of April on the occasion of the Dalit icon Babasaheb Ambedkar's birth anniversary.
The statue has been installed at the controversial Ambedkar memorial park. Critics say the park - built in honour of a man who championed the lower castes who are generlly poor - is far too expensive.
Ever since Ms Mayawati led her Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) to a thumping victory in assembly elections in India's most populous state in May 2007, she has commissioned many statues of herself and other Dalit icons.
But in Uttar Pradesh, which is one of India's most backward states with high crime rate, poor health services and very high illiteracy rates, Ms Mayawati spending on statues and memorials has come in for sharp criticism from many people.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

In poll run-up, govt told to focus on SCs

NEW DELHI: The committee of ministers, set up by the UPA to review all measures for Dalit welfare, has asked the government to swiftly formulate "special programmes" covering 149 districts where SCs comprise 20% or more of the population. In what can be read as a Congress move to resist Mayawati’s attempt to expand her Dalit base beyond UP, the high-profile committee of ministers on Dalit affairs headed by Pranab Mukherjee has suggested changes in the existing schemes of a whole range of ministries — from agriculture and health to telecommunications to textiles — to ensure that benefits reach the targeted constituency. The panel in its recommendation on education and skill development has suggested that the Department of Agriculture Research and Education and Indian Council of Agricultural Research should take steps (including coaching for entrance examinations) to ensure that 15% seats reserved for SCs in under-graduate, post-graduate and doctoral programmes in agriculture education are fully filled up, while special academic support and placement assistance is provided to those undergoing agriculture education courses. Similarly, the health ministry has been asked to ensure that SC students aspiring for medical, dental, nursing and pharmacy courses are provided good quality coaching facilities in district headquarters. Aiming to address the farming community under distress, the committee has asked the agriculture ministry to strive to ensure adequate representation of SCs in skill development schemes. The ministry has been asked to guarantee that 16% beneficiaries of the schemes to help agriculture graduates set up agri-clinic and agri-business centres are from among SCs.
The panel has suggested reservation for SCs in training courses in National Institute of Agriculture Extension Management and Extension Education Institutes to ensure that benefits of reform in the sector reach the disadvantaged group. From the point of view of Congress which is faced with a strong challenge from BSP, the recommendations could not have come a day sooner. Non-implementation of the schemes conceived and launched, with much fanfare, for Dalits have helped Mayawati popularise BSP’s message. The UP chief minister has capitalised on unfulfilled promises to make the case that no party other than BSP can be trusted to improve the lot of Dalits. The committee found that the present outlay of Rs 5 lakh for giving assistance to National Labour Cooperative Federation for Skill Development Programme to be inadequate and has recommended it be hiked. It also wants Dalits to be proportionally represented in other schemes as well: skill enhancement under Rashtriya Krishi Vikas Yojana (RKVY), training programme of central poultry development organisation, National Project for Improvement of Small Animal and Poultry. Another recommendation pertains to the setting up of Krishi Vigyan Kendras in districts and blocks with high Dalit concentration. The timing of the recommendations is significant, with Rahul Gandhi engaged in a seemingly ambitious move to make forays into Mayawati’s stronghold of UP and the latter seeking to poach Congress’ base among Dalits in the poll-bound states of Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh. Mayawati also entered the Karnataka arena in a big way. While whether she would be able to make her presence felt remains to be seen, her Southern enterprise has not gone down well with Congress leadership which, having failed to rope in BSP, has drifted towards SP. The committee, aiming to widen health coverage to poorer section, has asked health ministry that intensive efforts are needed to recruit Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHA) from among SC women. The recruitment of Dalits Panchakarma attendants is another recommendation.
( Source: TOI)

Daring Dalit starts green revolution against myth

Kendrapara: In Orissa there was an age-old belief that if a Dalit grows a coconut tree, then a member of his family would die. But in the last two decades, a Dalit man has broken the myth and brought about a green revolution.
Barely a few hundred metres from the Aliaha village in Kendrapara district, 46-year-old Nirakar Mallick is the proud custodian of hundreds of beautiful coconut trees.
But two decades back, the Brahmin community, which used to profit from growing these trees, had prohibited the Dalits from planting them.
But Nirakar became the first Dalit in the area to challenge the selfish myth, which the villagers allege was spread by the upper caste because they wanted to reap the benefits of the coconut plantations alone.
“I was vehemently opposed by the upper caste people for planting coconut trees. They threatened me that someone in my family will die if I planted the tree. But I did not listen to them and of course on one died in my family," Mallick, who is also known as green man, says.
In the last two decades, Nirakar has planted 10,000 trees in 10 acres of government land. A driver by profession in the state lift irrigation department, Nirakar spends more than Rs 500 of his monthly Rs 3000 salary on his agricultural venture. And understanding the benefits of this plantation, the villagers who once opposed Nirakar's efforts, now support him.
"We are very impressed by his efforts. There was barren land all around. We could not find shade to rest. But now due to such massive plantation, the total face of this area has changed and we all benefit from it," Shivprasad Sahoo, a village elderly, says.
Nirakar is not ready to stop just yet. He wants the future generations to reap the benefits of his struggle. And it is for this reason that he regularly visits nearby schools and encourages students to participate in his mission. His dream is to plant at least 1 lakh trees in the area before he dies.
(With inputs from Amiya Pani)