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Understanding Atrocities (Anand Teltumbde Explains )

Posted by samathain on November 26, 2009

 

Source: Counter Currents

Samatha

Anand traces different opperssors of dalits through historical time line. He finds that most of the upper castes are functioning as upper class disregarding castes, for the most part. However, the shudras who have assumed the power in rural india are exploiting caste, mainly at the cost of dalits.  He conculdes that brahminism is being used by the shudras to punish dalits demanding better life. Dalits being landless in rural india are left with no choice other than to work for these shudras ( so called backward castes).  He sees hope in class struggles of left. But left is hopelessly focussed on anti-american propaganda. Indian Left has to learn from china which focused on upliftment of workers rather than ideology.  Capitalism with Compassion is what could help india. India has willing workers, but not enough investment. Indian rich used to focus more on wasting money on weddings and functions. That is changing with indian middle class riding entreneurship wave in a big way. It is really the corruption in administration/judiciary/politics, prejudiced & unaccountable police force that is really blocking progress and welfare. Majority of the indians, regardless of caste or class, desire this. Ensuring that we have effective & accountable institutions that can tackle these problems is what is required irrespective of the party in power.  NREGA, RTI, Lokayukta, PILs are some of  the tools that could help.  In addition to class struggles, it is very important to involve the leaders, NGOs  and activists fighting for these in any meaningful dalit upliftment.

 

I make following five propositions:

•  The classical caste system depicted by the four varna structure is almost dead in India .

•  The existent caste system in India is concentrated at the lowest edge of the caste framework marking the division of caste and non-caste people.

•  While in urban areas the caste system operates as a system of premium and discounts, its most insidious expression in the vast countryside is caste atrocities.

•  Caste atrocities are the best proxy measure of the operational casteism and provide meaningful metrics to understand its contemporary form and content. Ending them would effectively end the remaining castes.

•  Any attempt to present castes in a more complex manner amounts to obfuscate their essential feature and only serves the interests of the ruling classes.

 

Despite huge scholarly interest in castes since colonial times and long history of anti-caste struggle, the discourse on caste still runs in a stereotypical manner, taking them as amorphous continuum of hierarchy, which is sourced from the Hindu dharmashastras. There is a kind of romantic delight in amplifying the prowess of this vile institution as defying the expectations of many, including the likes of Marx, who expected that it would crumble under the onslaught of capitalism and the forces of modernity.

 

The problem with this kind of understanding of castes is that it is utterly useless in dealing with them excepting perhaps for academic accomplishments and political opportunism. Firstly, such an amorphous continuum is not amenable to break into the neat contending camps with antagonistic contradictions, the resolution of which could be termed as resolution of caste issue. Secondly, since this continuum is supposed to exist with the religious authority of Hinduism, one is misled to infer that unless Hinduism is destroyed, castes may not be annihilated. Thirdly, the continuum, with its inevitable fluidity in holding innumerable castes in hierarchy entails endless contention between them and imparts it a kind of self-regulative perpetuity. And fourthly, in dealing with them it impels people towards directionless ‘social engineering’ rather than aiming at revolutionary change that this kind of deep rooted venom requires.

 

Castes are essentially hierarchy-seeking and hence pervasively divisive. They cut across classes, tend to germinate reactionary consciousness and hence cannot be used for articulating any radical struggle. It is not to say that the caste struggles that have taken place during the last century did not have radical content. They indeed were waged with radical vision and even accomplished a significant change in the lives of India ‘s shudras and ati-shudras, the worst victims of castes. However, down the line, they entailed rejuvenation of caste consciousness and enlivening of caste identities, totally antithetical development as far as their avowed objective of annihilation of castes was concerned.

 

In my analysis the main reason for this paradoxical result lay in their lack of grasp of the essence of castes to begin with and the failure to keep pace with their subsequent developments.

 

If we see through the brief history of encounters with castes, we get varied conceptions of castes depending upon the intent of the definer:

 

Colonial rulers saw castes with their divisive potential and promoted their conceptualisation in a manner in which India appeared sans civil society and as a bunch of communities warring among themselves. Towards this object, they built up huge information base through district gazetteers from 1869, decennial census from 1871, provincial statistics (1875) and encyclopaedic castes and tribes survey (1891) that reinforced divisive consciousness among people. Anti-Brahmin movement took castes as the contrivance of the outsider Aryan conquerors, the ancestors of the present day Brahmans, for enslaving native people and therefore targeted Brahmins and sought to discard their customs and traditions. Dalit movement, particularly under Dr. Ambedkar, while rejecting the racial theory of castes propounded by the non-Brahmin movement and identifying the enemy in Brahmanism, distinct from Brahman caste, along with capitalism as the contemporary exploitative system, however came to the conclusion with regard to castes that they were an integral part of the Hindu religio-cultural structure and proposed renouncement of Hinduism to escape the caste bondage. For the Communists castes were just a feudal relic, a part of the superstructure, which would automatically vanish when the economic base is changed through revolution. The contemporary Bahujanwadis (and its offshoots such as Mulanivasis) look at castes as an asset to mobilise the oppressed masses into a constituency of 85% to vanquish the 15% upper castes.

 

All of these conceptualizations reflect varied degree of theoretical confusion and miss out the essential character of castes. As a result, while the non-brahmin movement and Dalit movement succeeded in some degree in challenging the upper caste rule and alleviating caste sufferings of the oppressed castes, they could not eliminate them altogether. Castes have not only survived but have also grown in their oppressive content.

 

Contrary to commonplace notion castes have been changing all through history. One can easily note momentous changes in them during colonial period, brought about by the imperatives of colonial rule. The socio-cultural milieu of pre-colonial India principally shaped by the family and kinship institutions that conditioned minds with a religious and caste identity was severally impacted by the influx of western liberalism, colonial culture and ideology. The early reforms initiated by Warren Hastings, who was sent as the first governor general of India by the British Crown in terms of Regulating Act of 1773, such as instituting private ownership of land and codification of Hindu and Muslim laws according to their respective scriptures, had vastly strengthened the upper castes. Integration of India into a single politico-administrative unit and consequently institution of a civil service, army, judiciary, etc. variously impacted the socio-economic structure of the Indian society. Implementation of uniform criminal law significantly weakened the caste panchayats. Besides these and such other administrative changes, the advent of capitalism during colonial times wrought significant changes in the caste system.

 

It is true that unlike Europe capitalism in India did not have to contend with feudalism; rather it saw feudalism as an important ally in its supply chain. What however should be noted is that the upper castes, mainly banias and Brahmins, from which the early capitalist class (entrepreneurs and managers) emerged, largely lost the ritual sense of hierarchy among them, which was characteristic of castes. The capitalist culture certainly had a debilitating impact on the caste culture and traditions of these communities leading to obliteration of ritual notion of caste and promotion of social osmosis among them. The capitalist class comprising entrepreneurs and managers belonging to banias and Brahmins, and other business communities like Parsis, Khojas and Bohras, largely overcome the classical caste hierarchy and came closer as a class. They would however promote caste divide among the lower castes, to keep their feudal allies in supply chain pleased and to discipline the working class in their own establishments with its fatalistic ideology and divisive ethos.

 

After independence, the bourgeois landlord state that came into being in India adopted the modernist constitution. The constitution created an elaborate structure of protective and development measures for the dalits and tribals, the people technically outside the purview of the caste system. The state settled for modernization because the feudal classes also saw prospects for their advancement through it. The Nehruvian modernist Project, significantly comprising Land Reforms and Green Revolution, immensely enriched the traditional farming shudra castes firstly by making them owners of land and thereafter bringing them huge productivity gains. The erstwhile upper caste landlords shifted to the urban areas leaving the villages under the lordship of the shudra rich farmers. With their economic empowerment coupled with their numerical strength achieved by consolidating all the middle-band shudra castes, they soon became an important element in the political sphere.

 

In the context of castes, Green Revolution brought in capitalist relations in the countryside through development of cash economy and markets for agricultural inputs/ outputs and credit. On the positive side for dalits, it broke the backbone of the balutedari system but on the negative side, it abolished many of their traditional vocations. Without any alternative means of livelihood, the dalits were increasingly pushed to work on the shudra farms as landless labourers. In absence of the traditional upper castes in villages, the baton of Brahmanism was wielded by the neo-rich shudra castes sans cultural sophistry of the former. They expected dalits to pay them obeisance as they did to the upper castes in yesteryears. However, the consciousness gained by dalits through their movement conflicted with this expectation and contributed to building up grudge against them, which could precipitate into atrocity with slightest provocation.

 

The shudra castes today dominate the political establishment of the entire country and are fast coming up in entreneurship too. Although the vaishyas and Brahmins may be very visible as leading the capitalist establishment because of their first movers’ advantage, the shudra castes are fast catching up. The Gounders in Tamilnadu, a traditional farming caste, creating a world’s biggest knitwear industry in Thirupur or the Nadars dominating the fire cracker industry in Shivkasi and dominating the transportation industry, or Marathas in Maharashtra controlling the sugar cooperatives and education sectors or Patels in Gujarat becoming big businessmen and industrialists are just a few examples. With their advancement in the economic and political scale the ritual status of the shudra castes as a classical inferior caste group has almost vanished.

 

The rise of the shudras has led to the emergence of regional political parties by 1970s, which made politics fiercely competitive and impelled parties to increasingly make use of caste and communal identities. It culminated into formation of the first coalition government at the centre in 1977 which changed the complexion of politics permanently thereafter. The very discourse on backwardness of the backward castes, reflected by Mandal Commission also is a product of this process. This discourse could be clearly seen as responsible for opening the floodgates of caste identities in the name of backwardness. It is not that there are no poor or backwards among the shudras. India where 78 percent people subside on the earning of about 40 cents a day and suffer various deprivations is naturally fraught only with poor and backward people strewn across the castes and communities. Caste however is not about secular poverty and backwardness; it is about the socio-cultural, quasi-racial prejudice against certain people.

 

Thus, there is no socio-cultural prejudice among the castes within the formal caste system. If there is not enough intercaste transaction among them, it is partly because of the cultural drag and partly for the class difference. The caste prejudice however exists only against dalits. The existent caste system therefore reduces to the divide between dalits and non-dalits. While it is pervasively experienced by dalits, its most menacing manifestation is seen in the form of atrocities on dalits in rural areas.

 

The empowerment of the shudra castes and relative disempowerment of dalits in countryside coupled with the latter’s cultural assertion has been responsible for caste clashes and caste atrocities. While dalits were always wronged, the phenomenon of caste atrocities could be marked by the increased power asymmetry between dalits and shudras in villages by the late 1960s. O ne of the first grave atrocities took place on 25 December 1968 in Keezhavenmani in old Thanjavur district in which 44 dalits, mostly women and children were massacred by the landlords and their henchmen. It was followed by spate of atrocities all over the country. Initially, as even in Keezhavenmani, the atrocities came as a consequence of class struggle waged by the communist parties, firstly the parliamentary parties and later the naxalites. After Keezhavenmani, it was Purnia in Bihar which saw the first caste massacre in 1969. Then there were spate of killings all over Bihar over three decades. It only stopped when Dalits began to retaliate with the help of naxalites by the late 1990s.

 

Atrocities mirror the intricacies of social dynamics vis-à-vis caste. As for instance there has been a qualitative difference between atrocities earlier and now. Earlier, atrocities were committed as a routine with an assumption of absolute right over Dalits, with no sense of wrongdoing. Now atrocities are committed with a sense of loss of that right, with a sense of being wronged. Earlier, atrocities were committed in arrogance as Dalits would not speak out; now they are committed in vengeance against Dalit assertion. Earlier, atrocities were the manifestation of contempt for Dalits, today they are the manifestation of resentment against the privileges Dalits get from the state.

 

There has also been a difference between the nature of atrocities earlier and now. Earlier, they were committed as an integrated part of the interaction between Dalits and non-Dalits and hence tended to be casual, more of humiliating in nature than of physically damaging. Today, they are far more violent and are in nature of vengeance or punishment. They are therefore not only humiliating but also physically destructive; far more brutal than before. Earlier, atrocities were mostly committed by individuals, in a huff of rage. Now they are committed collectively, somewhat in a planned manner, in a mode of demonstrative justice; teaching a lesson to the entire community. The increasing number of atrocities against Dalits in recent years has been alarming enough but this change in their intensity also is noteworthy.

 

Atrocities, data on which incidentally are maintained by the government, can serve as the best proxy measure for the existent casteism. The intensity of atrocities, the area in which they take place, their frequency, their time series growth and even the data on the subsequent process of justice delivery system provide good metrics to understand castes and caste dynamics and for strategizing combat against them. Many a myth gets exploded in their wake. For instance, the myth that only the upper (brahmanical) castes are the oppressor of dalits and in corollary the shudra (backward) castes are their allies; the myth that economic development dampen castes, the myth that the caste atrocities are the correlate of feudal economy, the myth of representation logic dearly upheld by Dalits that if their caste-men are represented in administration, the latter would take care of their interests; the myth that atrocities are committed only on the weakest of dalits, the myth that there exists a vibrant anti-caste Dalit movement that is vigilant about the dalit interests, the myth that the formal political opposition represents contradiction among the ruling classes (castes) and which helps dalits in fighting their oppression, the myth that political action of dalits is leader-centric, the myth about the independence of judiciary and impartial media; the myth that there exists a sizable progressive civil society, which is against casteism and the greatest myth of state being the friend of Dalits or at least impartial mediator between Dalits and others, had all crumbled at Khairlanji, as variously in other atrocity cases. It held out mirror before us and showed us what needs to be done. All atrocities unambiguously exposed that casteism is no more confined to civil society; it is well supported by the state apparatus, implying thereby that the anti-caste forces necessarily have to deal with the state too.

 

Given the obscure origins and the resilience of the caste system, the viable strategy for combating caste could be seen in curbing its manifestation. In contemporary times, atrocities being the most dominant manifestation of castes, the strategic focus should be to arrest atrocities. As seen before, the root cause for atrocities is the growing power asymmetry between dalits and non-dalits in villages. It may be interesting to recall that more than seven decades ago Dr. Ambedkar, while explaining the rationale behind his declaration to renounce Hinduism to his vanguard activists in 1936 had exclusively focused on the issue of atrocities and diagnosed exactly the same thing. He proposed the solution in terms of supplementing dalit-strength by merging dalit community with some existing religious community through mass conversion. Although his religious conversion in 1956 did not confirm to this prescription, the futility of communitarian solution or religious conversion is not difficult to see. In the then communally charged atmosphere, it might have been thinkable to speak in terms of communitarian solution, but today when the classes have sprouted out of the bellies of each caste, they would be utterly useless. The power asymmetry between dalits and non-dalits can be effectively overcome only by their class unity with others, transcending the caste idiom. While it may appear as the distant dream to many today for historical and other reasons, it is the only effective solution to the caste problem worth pursuing. The initiative in this respect shall have to be taken by the Left forces. The beginning can always be made if they join dalits with ideological clarity in retaliating atrocities. As the experience in Tsunduru and the Gaya-Aurangabad belt indicated, retaliation is the only effective way of curbing the atrocities and in turn castes. The shockwave created through it can not only deter the perpetrators of crime but also detach the oppressed masses of the shudra castes from them. The same can also impel desired cultural change and accelerate class unity of the oppressed masses across castes.

Contrary to commonplace view, the problem of castes has become much simpler today than ever before. The existential castes are confined to a divide between dalits and non-dalits, quite like the racial divide between blacks and white or the class division between capitalists and proletariat. No time in history, castes rendered themselves as easy for combating against as they do now. The historical project of annihilation of castes is accomplishable now, provided the forces swearing by it are ready to act.

 

Dr. Anand Teltumbde is a Mumbai based human rights activist and writer on the issues related to peoples’ movement.

Posted in Caste Atrocity Victims, Caste Issues, Caste Violence, Dalit Issues, Human Rights | Tagged: , , , , | 2 Comments »

Dalit families refused insurance scheme

Posted by samathain on November 13, 2009

Samatha

37 families have been thrown on the road because they wanted to register for medical insurance scheme. Police Sub Inspector who investigated the report is Transferred !!! District administration of Virudhunagar district of Tamil Nadu have not bothered to rehabilitate the suffering families. Police have actually registered FIR against the dalits !!! They have been rendered homeless due to criminal behavior of upper castes and the action of administration, police and the uncaring government makes us down our heads in shame. Why there is no outrage ? Why villagers of Veppankulam are allowed to treat fellow villagers like animals and slaves ? Why they have no respect for laws or humanity ? Why did the government support these anti-socials by transferring the police inspector who went to investigate the matter ? Aren’t there anybody in Veppankulam who does not feel outraged at the inhuman behavior of village strong men ? What are the good men and women of TN doing ? This is an insult to periyar, who wanted the dravidian land to be free from inhumanity of casteism. It is even worse that DMK, which is based on dravidian rights, is the government allowing this inhuman act by majority of a village with complete disregard for law and the rights OPENLY !!!!

Source : Times of India

Dalit families refused insurance scheme in TNPadmini Sivarajah, TNN 27 October 2009, 04:08am IST
MADURAI: Thirty-six dalit families in
a village in Virudhunagar district of Tamil Nadu say they have been ostracised
after they questioned their exclusion from the state governmentâ
Kalaignar medical insurance scheme for the poor.

Human rights
activists who visited T Veppankulam village in Tiruchuzhi block say the dalit
families were being discriminated against by not allowing them to register under
the scheme. The Peoples Union for Human Rights and other organisations went on a
fact-finding mission to the village. The team was told that when registrations
for the scheme began in the village on October 3, a Hindu in charge of the work
had ignored dalits standing in a long queue and registered only the names of
non-Dalits.

An argument over the exclusion degenerated into
violence, and many dalits were injured as they were beaten up by members of the
other caste. Dalits deserted the village immediately, fearing for their lives,
and now stay in a settlement at Kariapatti, about 14 km away from their village.
They are virtually living on the road, as there is shelter only for cooking and
for children to sleep, said advocate Rajani and A Marx of PUHR.


Home out of bounds

 

Source: Express Buzz

Home out of bounds to 37 Dalit families


Photo:Express
First Published : 19 Oct 2009 02:53:00 AM IST
Last Updated : 19 Oct 2009 09:19:39 AM IST

KARIAPATTI: For the members of 37 Dalit families, who fled T Veppankulam in Virudhunagar district on October 4 fearing violent reprisals from the dominant caste Hindus of their village and took refuge in Kariapatti, the future remains a big question mark as the district administration and police have turned a blind eye to their plight.The day before the Dalits left their homes, casteist tensions had run high at T Veppankulam when some Dalits waiting in queue with their families to get photographed for the Kalaignar Maruthuva Kaapeetu Thittam (state government’s medical insurance scheme) objected to some caste Hindus jumping the queue.The verbal exchange led to violence, when five Dalit men, including V Muniyandi, a daily wage labourer, were badly beaten. “As usual, they made casteist remarks against us and began to thrash us.” Muniyandi told Express.The terror did not stop there. Fearing that the Dalits would file an FIR against them, the caste Hindus surrounded their houses and refused to let them out. Those who had got into state transport buses were also forcibly made to step down.Sources said Mukkulam sub-inspector Ramaiah, who came to the village to enquire about the incident, also had to bear the brunt of upper caste fury. The man in khaki was reportedly let off only after he told them that he belonged to their caste. He was transferred the same night, the sources added.Muniyandi was again beaten up by a 40-member group with slippers and sticks when he tried to meet his wife Pappa at a nearby house. Around 6 pm, he managed to escape to Kariapatti, 20 km away, when his wife wrapped him in her sari and smuggled him into a bus.On October 4, some 37 Dalit families similarly made their way to Kariapatti, where they enjoy some protection from some Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi (VCK) activists, in small groups with just the clothes on their back. They now stay in a makeshift shelter. “We have been reduced to begging for rice, pulses and vegetables and it is about 20 days since our children went to school,” they said.VCK councillor Iniyavan said the district administration and the police were not taking any steps for the rehabilitation of the families. “As is the practice, the police filed the first FIR against the Dalits and then filed one against the caste Hindus,” he added.The Dalit villagers said none of the district officials had bothered to visit them and enquire about their plight. The police too had not taken any action on the FIR filed against the caste Hindus.“As the upper caste people have served an ultimatum on us, it is impossible for us to return to our village,” they added.

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Posted in Caste Atrocity Victims, Caste Discrimination, Caste Violence, Dalit Struggles, Recent News | Tagged: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Book Review – Rural Dalit ghetto: ‘Khairlanji’ by Anand Teltumbde

Posted by samathain on April 22, 2009

Source: Himalaya Magazine

Rural Dalit ghetto: ‘Khairlanji’ by Anand Teltumbde April 2009
By: Vijay Prashad

Khairlanji:
A strange and bitter crop
By Anand Teltumbde
Navayana, 2008
On 29 September 2006, in a modest town in eastern Maharashtra called
Khairlanji, a tragedy occurred. A gang of Other Backward Castes
(OBCs), led by the local Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) potentate,
raided the home of a Buddhist agricultural family, the Bhotmanges.
With impunity, the gang raped and killed Surekha Bhotmange and her
daughter Priyanka, and killed her two sons, Sudhir and Roshan. The
three children had done well in school, with Roshan on the road to
becoming a computer professional and Priyanka a topper in class 10.
Apart from the animosities inherent in the caste system, there was no
motivation for the attack. The Bhotmanges are Dalits and their
neighbours are OBCs, many of whom resented the dignified and
successful lives being led by the victim family. The violence against
the Bhotmanges was so extreme (the local BJP leader, Bhaskar Kadav, is
accused of raping Surekha Bhotmange post-mortem) that it is impossible
to discount the rage that comes from ideas of caste superiority. Those
who perpetrate such atrocities visit the courthouse casually, with the
full knowledge that their political friends will protect them until
the case is forgotten – as so many others are.

Anand Teltumbde has now written a book that will never allow this
massacre to be forgotten. Nor will it allow us to think of Khairlanji
as an aberration. Since the 1970s, as Dalit communities in India
organised themselves to gain political power, and since the modest
benefits of affirmative action have allowed some within the community
to rise in government service, attacks on Dalits have become routine.
The National Crime Records Bureau shows that in 2007 alone there were
more than 30,000 crimes recorded against Dalits or Scheduled Castes,
of which almost 10,000 were recorded by the police under the
Prevention of Atrocities Act. Human-rights groups tabulate the
enormous number of rapes of Dalit women, many of whom never lodge
reports due to the social sanction for such violence in general, and
also because of fear of humiliation and further aggression at the
police station. The violence at Khairlanji, like the violence at
Melavalavu in 1999, is stunning in its detail, but also ordinary in
its regularity. Such incidents have become banal – so much so,
Teltumbde tells us, that the Indian media no longer pays attention.
“Caste atrocities,” writes Teltumbde, “are a part of the ecology of
India.” And yet, because mention of them induces guilt, the
advertising-captured media ignores them.

Teltumbde may be too modest to mention that he is B R Ambedkar’s
grandson, but he has the analytical acidity of his ancestor’s pen.
Four years ago, he made an important intervention on the role of
anti-caste struggles as part of the anti-imperialist movement. He has
developed the argument that, in the postcolonial era, Brahmins and
other ‘elevated’ castes moved from the rural areas to the cities,
where they benefited from the openings afforded them by the new state.
In the rural areas, it was the intermediate castes and OBCs, the
Shudras, who benefited from the modest land reforms, and it was they
who became the immediate oppressor of the Dalits (bear in mind that 70
percent of Dalits in India are landless cultivators). In this way,
Teltumbde writes, the Shudras became the “virtual baton holders for
Brahmanism”. The Shudra-dominant castes have also become the “main
prop of the Hindutva movement”, as was documented in detail in
Teltumbde’s edited collection Hindutva and Dalits (Samya, 2005). These
analytical moves allow Teltumbde to identify the problem at hand in
Khairlanji, one of India’s many rural ghettos. The contradiction
between the Shudra landholders (who are aligned with the BJP and Shiv
Sena) and this Dalit Buddhist family is writ large in the tragedy that
visited the Bhotmange family.

Strengthening caste
Between the 1970s and the 1990s, certain region-specific Shudra castes
took advantage of agricultural inputs from the government and land
reforms to consolidate their economic position in the countryside.
Money and land in hand, they turned to the political domain, and
became the backbone of many of the regional parties – including the
Telugu Desam, Shiv Sena and Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam – that were able
to exert themselves after the Congress lost its hegemony in
Maharashtra and in South India by the 1980s. Dalits, meanwhile, did
not have access to land, and they therefore could not position
themselves to claim political power. To complicate matters further, in
Maharashtra the Dalit vote was split after 1958 into a series of
discordant parties, all of which claim Ambedkar as their own. When
liberalisation soured the rural economy from 1991 onward, the Shudras
turned on the Dalits, who had no effective political shield to protect
them.

After the Khairlanji massacre, a local women’s organisation in the
neighbouring town of Bhandara, the Rashtriya Sambuddha Mahila
Sanghatana, conducted the first protest. This was followed by the
formation of the Khairlanji Dalit Hatyakhand Kruti Samiti, through the
initiative of the Mahila Jan Andolan Samiti – whose leader, the
Communist Party of India (Marxist)-aligned Ashu Saxena, was unduly
harassed by the government, which spent far more energy moving against
the activists than against the perpetrators. Dalit political parties
were wary of taking the lead, with R S Gawai of the Republican Party
of India (RPI) allegedly telling the local government to suppress the
news of the massacre. (Teltumbde believes that this was for lack of
commitment, although it might also have been for lack of nerve – many
leaders, such as Gawai, feared that the huge numbers of Dalits present
at the Diksha Divas celebrations might have run riot from Nagpur to
Khairlanji.) In November, 25,000 people flocked to the Amravati rally
organised by the Khairlanji Nished Kruti Samiti, and many more
followed. The national media picked up the story grudgingly, and even
then only when pushed by the fact-finding visits of various
human-rights groups, and the visits of the CPI (M)’s Brinda Karat and
the RPI’s Prakash Ambedkar.

In the end, it is the lack of political representation that rightly
irks Teltumbde. He does not pay much heed to the bahujan portmanteau
(referring to OBCs, Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes and other
minorities). He even worries that such parties are keener to
strengthen caste than to annihilate it – as he wrote in his 2004 book,
“Caste is intrinsically divisive.” Against caste, for its
annihilation, Teltumbde has created a solid corpus of work that bears
witness to the degradation of Indian democracy, and to the capacity of
Indian socialism. India’s revolution, to paraphrase Bhagat Singh, is
sharpened on the anvil of Teltumbde’s thoughts.

Posted in Caste Atrocity Victims, Caste Violence, Dalit Books, Dalit Victims | Tagged: , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Caste bias behind attacks on christians in orissa

Posted by samathain on October 1, 2008

Samatha
UPA government has to prove to the people that they are serious about tackling terror, both the one unleashed by islamic terrorists and the ones related to communal violence. In a recent CNN Program, Face The Nation, 97% of the SMS voters felt organisations like Bajrangdal should be banned. This is a good sign. Even National Security Advisor has said that both SIMI and Bajrangdal are dangerous. Look at link SIMI, Bajrang Dal are dangerous: NSA . Government’s inaction and lack of public outcry over this could lead to more communal violence in the near future. Look at latest report from Adilabad (AP), 6 burnt alive in AP, MLA ‘role’ in riots being probed. Good thing is, unlike karnataka and orissa governments, AP government has ordered CBI Probe. This gives a hope for justice, free of subversion by local powers. This is a good thing for UPA government. They should be politically savvy enough to use this attack on minorities and the proven (long known, suspected) terror by sangh parivar in the upcoming elections. Their think tank should put heads together and come out with a good strategy. Something they can take to voters. Read a story on danger of bajrangdal, The radical and dark side of Bajrang Dal. VHP and its sister organisations are also responsible for much of hindu terror. Read this article by washington post, Four Hindus charged in fatal indian bombing.

Source: NMC

INDIA: Ongoing violence against the Dalits in Orissa must be prevented immediately

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION – URGENT APPEAL PROGRAMME

Urgent Appeal Case: AHRC-UAC-192-2008

28 August 2008

——————————————————

INDIA: Ongoing violence against the Dalits in Orissa must be prevented immediately

ISSUES: Caste based discrimination; impunity; religious group; state inaction

——————————————————

Dear friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC), the National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights

(NCDHR) and the International Dalit Solidarity Network (IDSN) hasten to bring to your urgent

attention the ongoing violence reported from the state of Orissa, India. It is reported that as of now in

Orissa, particularly in parts of the state like Kandhamal, Bargarh and Koraput Deogarh districts, a

rampage of burning, looting and murdering is underway. It is reported that the violence has resulted

in 14 deaths so far, in addition to the murder of four Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) [World Hindu

Council] cadres that reportedly has triggered the current outbreak of violence.

CASE DETAILS:

On August 23, 2008 a VHP leader Mr. Laxmananda Saraswati (89 years) and four of his associates were

killed in Kandhamal district. The VHP is a Hindu militant organisation operating in India since 1964. The VHP

has close associations with other fundamentalist Hindu divisive forces operating in India, like the Rashtriya

Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) and its political force, the Bahratiya Janata Party (BJP). The youth-wing of the

VHP is called the Bajrang Dal.

Immediately after the murder, the VHP and its allies called for a state-wide bandh (enforced protest by the

closure of all commercial, government and private establishments). The VHP issued a public statement

accusing the Christian community in the state as being behind the murder. Soon after this, the VHP carders

and its supporters reportedly unleashed a brutal and systematic attack upon the Dalit communities in the

state, focusing on the Christian Dalit communities, their properties like houses, business institutions, prayer

halls and other Dalit community organisations.

The rampage unleashed by the VHP and its cadres has resulted in the murder of 14 persons so far and in

the destruction of millions worth of property. For the murder of the VHP leader and four of his associates, a

Maoist group operating in the region has claimed responsibility for the murder. Credible sources also inform

that the same Maoist group had in fact sent warning messages prior to the murder of the VHP leader. It is

reported that the VHP is now making use of the murder of one of its leaders as an excuse to flare-up

violence against the Dalits in the state.

It is reported that even though several people lost their life and property in the ongoing violence in Orissa,

the state government did nothing to prevent the incident of the murder of the VHP leader snowballing into a

large-scale violence. The government of India also abstained for several days before intervening.

It is only on August 27, that the Union Minister of State for Home Mr. Sriprakash Jaiswal visited the state.

The minister before returning to New Delhi also met the Chief Minister of the state Mr. Naveen Patnaik and

the State Governor Mr. M. C. Bhandare. While the minister ensured that four battalions of the Central

Reserve Police (CRPF) and its three helicopters will be deployed in the state at the request of the state

government, the minister also accused the state administration of its neglect in preventing the violence.

The lack of prompt and immediate action to prevent the violence resulted in horrific incidents. For example a

violent Hindu mob terrorised the inhabitants of an orphanage and set fire to the building where a female staff

was burnt alive. A few days ago, a school was raided by the Hindu mob where five innocent persons were

killed. More than two dozen similar incidents were reported from Orissa since August 23 that depicts the

willful negligence of the state government to prevent the violence.

It is only yesterday that the state government declared an emergency in the violence hit area. The state

government has also issued a shoot at sight order. Yet the state government has failed completely to control

the ongoing violence and to arrest the actual persons behind it.

It is reported that the victims of the violence are forced to abandon their houses, stop their businesses and to

run away for life to nearby forests to be safe. Ordinary life has become impossible in certain parts of the

state, especially in Kandhamal, Bargarh and Koraput Deogarh districts. Schools and other educational

institutions remains closed indefinitely. The violence was targeted against the Dalits and those who work for

the Dalit empowerment.

Several local and national organisations have written to the Indian authorities calling for an urgent

intervention. Of particular importance is an application filed in the state high court by two groups–the Human

Rights Law Network and the Ambedkar Lohia Vichar Manch–requesting a direction from the court to the

state government to ensure the safety of the victims of violence and to prevent it from further spreading.

It is reported that the court has allowed the application directing the state government to ensure that all

victims are indentified and provided adequate protection from further violence. The court has also directed

the government to ensure that the victims receive necessary relief supplies and provisions are made for their

rehabilitation.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION:

The murdered VHP leader in the past was accused of orchestrating communal tension in the state. It is

reported that this person was spearheading a violent and fundamentalist Hindu movement in the state,

particularly against the Dalit communities and their villages. The VHP was targeting the Dalit communities

and their villages who had liberated themselves from the age-old inhuman practices of caste based

discrimination and forced slavery.

Instead of openly speaking out against the Dalit empowerment and the growing tendency of the empowered

Dalits posing new challenges against the arbitrary domination of the dominant castes, the VHP cadres led

campaigns in the state to force the Dalits to return and reaffirm their belief in the Hindu religious practices,

which supports the caste system. The forced reaffirmation of faith in the Hindu Religion upon the Dalit

communities was justified and carried out vehemently by Saraswati and his cadre as the ‘re-purification’ of

the Dalits. Neither the state government nor the government of India intervened to prevent this.

Orissa is a relatively poor state, with a large Dalit/Tribal population. The practices of the caste system like

‘untouchability’, manual scavenging and bonded labour is forced upon the Dalit community with full vigor in

the state. Dalits are denied education, decent jobs and reasonable payment for the work they do. The Dalit

identity is stamped upon a person at birth being born to a Dalit parent/s. In short, being a Dalit often means

segregation, bonded labour, illiteracy and social ostracism. The Hindu religious belief does not allow a

change of this status by any means. It also means for the dominant caste Hindu, a Dalit remaining a Dalit is

a guaranteed form of free labour.

The gradual liberation of a considerable section of the Dalits in Orissa from the shackles of the Hindu

religious divisive and discriminatory practices meant that the Dalits benefiting from the relatively open

economy and other opportunities like education accessible to them. This means that Dalits are no more

bound to be bonded to the dominant caste and to be their slaves, but could obtain reasonably good

government jobs and also educate their new generations. For the dominant caste this change was nothing

but an unwelcome change in the socio, political economy. It also uprooted the centuries old social patterns

that guaranteed them unchallenged and comfortable living conditions at the expense of the Dalits.

The dominant caste responded by setting up their own educational institutions. These institutions are called

Vanvasi Kalyan Kendra (forest dweller welfare centre) where education was nothing but indoctrination into

ritualised Hindu practices and the structured reassertion of the caste dominance in schools fueled by

pretentious nationalist sentiments based on Hindu scriptures like the Vedas and the ultimate Sanadana

Dharma that justified caste as an essential requirement for social harmony, prosperity and peace.

These schools and the education offered by the dominant caste were rejected by the Dalits, who by then had

realised the fruits of liberation through proper education, given by the Government and Christian missionary

schools. The fundamentalist Hindu forces like the VHP soon started implementing covert ways of punishing

the liberated Dalits by orchestrating communal violence. On the outside it appeared as Hindus fighting

Christian missionaries. Deep within, it is an attempt by the communal forces like the VHP, Bajrang Dal, RSS

and the BJP to reassert caste identity and the domination these forces enjoyed upon the Dalits on the

excuse of religious beliefs.

A report by the National Commission on Minorities (NCM), a government of India establishment that

conducted a field study in Orissa during 21-24 April 2008 proves this point. The study was conducted by the

NCM after the December 2007 violence in Orissa orchestrated by the VHP.1

The report says “But the underlying causes for this [riots] go well beyond the Kui Pana conflict [Hindu -

Christian conflict] so ably highlighted in the report of the last team. In Bamunigaon, for instance, the Christain

sahi (locality) was attacked and this was followed by an attack on the Hindu sahi. But the village itself has

more than one Christian and Hindu sahi. Yet only two sahis were vandalized. On closer questioning, it turned

out that the Christian sahi that was attacked was far more prosperous than the one at Battapally that was not

attacked.

Although both are inhabited mostly by Dalits [sic] Christians, the attack was concentrated in the sahi whose

members were prosperous and had organised themselves under the banner of Ambedkar Vanik Sangh.

These people are shop owners or are in [government] service. The inhabitants of Battapally sahi are much

poorer and provide no competition to the inhabitants of the Hindu sahi. The economic motif behind the rioting

becomes apparent.

Similar sentiments were expressed by Mr. Vincent Manoharan, the General Secretary of the NCDHR.

According to Vincent “…the current violence is an offshoot of the earlier incident that happened in December

2007. It is beyond doubt that the attempt by the Hindu fundamentalist forces are to silence the Dalits and to

ensure an end to the Dalit socio economic empowerment that they inherited recently through education and

business. For the NCDHR and its partners who work in this region, it is clear that the violence is a ruse to

prevent the assertion of Dalits and their economic development and empowerment in the state. The

dominant caste Hindus cannot tolerate the Dalits liberating themselves through economic empowerment,

becoming socially equal in status and thereby posing a formidable challenge to the dominant caste’s socioeconomic

and political dominance, superiority and authority.

The NMC has also expressed the same opinion in their report after the December 2007 violence.

In addition to issue of Dalit empowerment, there are also other interests playing a role, clandestinely in the

state. For example, Orissa is rich in its mineral resources. Dalits are on a regular basis being evicted from

their natural environment to facilitate the operations of the mining companies. Violence committed against

the Dalit communities in Orissa is an easy way of instilling fear in the Dalit community.

Unfortunately the violence in Orissa is portrayed as a purely Hindu-Christian issue, sidelining the caste factor.

The fundamental fact that the violence in the state is against Dalit empowerment committed and sponsored

by fundamental dominant caste Hindu forces is ignored. The government also plays the same tune. In fact,

had the government been more vigilant and true to its commitment to the people, this incident would not

have happened. They knew that violence would erupt at anytime. By their inaction they let it happen.

1 Link to the report: http://ncm.nic.in/pdf/VC%20Tour%20Report%20of%20Orissa.pdf

Living conditions are tough in this backward state. Deaths from starvation and other natural disasters are

common in Orissa. Though the government is still in a denial mode, hundreds of persons have died from

starvation in that state in the past decade. The estimates made by credible sources suggest that on an

average 100-170 persons die from starvation each year in Orissa. In the period 2000 – 2003 about 441

deaths from starvation were documented from Orissa. Most of these deaths were reported from the southern

region of the state, which has a high Dalit population.

An estimated 2/3rd of the population live in abject poverty in Orissa. The state has some dismal records vis a

vis national statistics on infant mortality rate, lowest number of doctors per capita, poor public facilities like

government sponsored education, sanitation, housing, electricity and clean drinking water. This not only

paints a dismal picture about the government but also of the humanitarian and other social service agencies

operating in the state and their actual reach to the poor and needy population in Orissa.

SUGGESTED ACTION:

Please write to the relevant authorities named below expressing your concern about the situation in Orissa.

The Indian authorities must be urged to take all possible steps immediately to end the violence in the state.

The victims must be provided immediate protection and the state must ensure that the perpetrators are

investigated and brought to justice without delay.

Send an appeal: http://www.ahrchk.net/ua/support.php?ua=UAC-192-2008

The AHRC with NCDHR and ISDN will write separate letter to the UN Special Rapporteur on contemporary

forms of racism, discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, calling for an intervention in this

situation.

SAMPLE LETTER:

Dear __________,

INDIA: Please take immediate steps to end the violence in Orissa

Victims: Dalits facing violence in Orissa from the Hindu fundamentalist forces

Name of alleged perpetrators: Hindu fundamentalist forces headed by the Visva Hindu Parisad (VHP) and

its associate cadres operating in Orissa

Date of incident: Since 23 August 2008 and continuously thereon

Place of incident: Orissa, India

I am concerned to know about the recent spate of violence reported from the state of Orissa that has thus far

resulted in 14 deaths and in loss of millions worth property.

I am informed that the current spate of violence in the state has its roots in the earlier incidents of violence

unleashed by the Hindu fundamentalist force, the Visva Hindu Parisad (VHP) against the Dalits. A recent

incident was reported in December 2007. I am concerned to know that inspite of the government’s complete

knowledge that the violence would erupt in the state, in the event of the killing of a VHP leader by the

extremist groups and that the specific target of the violence would be the Dalit communities, the government

did nothing to prevent it.

I am given to understand that the state is ruled by a political party, the Biju Janata Dal (BJD), an ally of the

Bahratiya Janata Party (BJP) supported by the VHP. It is unacceptable that the state government led by the

BJD was sitting tight as the incidents after the murder of a VHP cadre snowballed into a massive riot in the

state, sponsored by the VHP against innocent Dalits whose socio economic empowerment is reportedly not

tolerated by the Caste Hindus of this state. The state government, particularly the Chief Minister Mr. Naveen

Patnaik, must accept and own responsibility for his government’s as well as his ministry’s willful negligence

and its incapacity to prevent the violence in the state. The Chief Minister is also responsible for the Home

Ministry in the state.

I am further informed that the current spate of violence is not just an aftermath of the murder of a VHP cadre,

but a planned and orchestrated violence targeted against the Dalit empowerment in the state. I am informed

that since several years the VHP is spearheading a campaign against Dalits in the state. By the silence of

the state administration, it appears that the state government was letting the violence rupture again in the

state.

I am also informed that the condition of life in the state is so poor that daily life is marred with violence and

poverty. I am informed that the current spate of violence will only make matters worse for the ordinary people

in the state especially the marginalised, the Dalits and the tribal communities in the state.

I therefore urge you to immediately take necessary steps so that the violence does not spread any further

and that it is immediately arrested. I also further request you to take all possible steps to apprehend the VHP

cadres who are orchestrating the violence in the state and to provide all necessary steps to ensure that the

victims of violence, particularly the Dalits, who were forced to run away into nearby forests to save their lives

are protected and measures taken to ensure that on their return they will not be further subjected to any

further violence.

Yours sincerely,

—————-

PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTERS TO:

1. Hon. Murlidhar Chandrakant Bhandare

Governor

Raj Bhavan

Bhubaneswar, Orissa

INDIA

Fax: + 91 674 2404695

2. Mr. Naveen Patnaik

Through the Office of the Chief Secretary

Government of Orissa

Bhubaneswar, Orissa

INDIA

Fax: + 91 674 2536660

E-mail: csori@ori.nic.in

3. Dr. Manmohan Singh

Prime Minister of India

PMO, Room number 152, South Block

New Delhi

INDIA

Fax: +91 11 23019545

4. Mr. Shivraj V. Patil

Minister of Home Affairs

Through the office of Mr. K.C. Jain

Joint Secretary (Coordination and Public Grievances)

Room No. 9, North Block, Ministry of Home Affairs, New Delhi – 110 001

INDIA

Fax: + 91 11 23093750 or 23092763

E-mail: jscpg-mha@nic.in or dirpg-mha@nic.in

5. Minister of Social Justice and Empowerment

Government of India

Shastri Bhawan, Dr Rajendra Prasad Road

New Delhi – 110 001

INDIA

Fax + 91 11 23384918

E-mail: min-sje@sb.nic.in

6. Chairperson

National Human Rights Commission

Faridkot House, Copernicus Marg

New Delhi 110001

INDIA

Fax + 91 11 2338 6521

E-mail: chairnhrc@nic.in

7. Chairperson

National Commission for Scheduled Castes

5th Floor, Lok Nayak Bhawan

Khan Market

New Delhi 110 003

INDIA

Fax + 91 11 2463 2298

E-mail: jointsecretary-ncsc@nic.in or chairman-ncsc@nic.in

Thank you.

Urgent Appeal Programme

Asian Human Rights Commission (ua@ahrchk.org)

 

 

 

 

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Dalit stir: Six landlords booked

Posted by samathain on August 27, 2008

(Siddhartha Kumar)

Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Dalit stir: Six landlords booked
16 Aug 2008, 0351 hrs IST, Neel Kamal,TNN
MANSA: A bunch of Dalit labourers, struggling under a crippling social
boycott called by upper caste landlords, finally got justice after
almost 20 days without work, denied to them following a face-off with
the farmers regarding wages.
The police on Thursday night booked six farmers under the SC/ST Act
for calling the social boycott against the labourers.
The group from Guradi village had been struggling for their “rightful”
wages and had even staged a dharna at the district administrative
complex in Mansa five days ago.
The administration had then ensured settlement, but nothing happened
as the farmers, about a dozen, had declined to pay them according to
the negotiated rate.

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Chengara: Letter to National Commission for Women by Delhi groups

Posted by samathain on August 27, 2008

(Ayesha Matthan)

Source: kafila.org

The Chairperson
National Commission for Women
4, Deen Dayal Upadhyaya Marg,
New Delhi
Subject: Torture and Rape of Women and Other Incidents in the Land
Struggle at Chengara, Kerala
Dear Chairperson,
We urge your attention to the following incidents in Chengara, Kerala
as they require your urgent intervention.
In the ongoing struggle for land in Chengara, there is escalating
violence against the peaceful and democratic protest of the people.
Here women are the most affected as they are the targets of brutal
attacks by the workers of trade unions affiliated to leading political
parties and also other hired henchmen of Harrison Malayalam Ltd. Many
women have testified that the attacks happened right in the presence
of the police. All these events seem to indicate a total breakdown of
the state’s administrative machinery to redress the situation, which
makes the intervention of external bodies like yours crucial.
As reported in The New Indian Express on August 11, 2008, four women
activists of Sadhujana Vimochana Samyuktha Vedi (SJVSV), a Dalit
organisation leading the land struggle in Chengara appeared on a
Malayalam T.V. channel and accused trade union leaders affiliated to
the CPI (M) of rape and torture. Till today, no complaint has been
registered, and no one was arrested by the local police. Reporters in
the media also informed us that many women and girls involved in
struggle have been continually harassed and molested by the goons.
These recent events have been triggered by a blockade set up by the
company people along with active support of police and hired goons in
hundreds. This blockade prohibits the mobility of the people in the
struggle site. The blockade has culminated in the deliberate cutting
off of food and other essential supplies to the protesters for more
than 10 days.
Violence Against Women in Land Struggles
The people in the struggle site are largely daily wage workers going
out of the site on an everyday basis. Women who go out in search of
work are abused both physically and verbally by those who have set up
the blockade. The women are often stopped and harassed by the company
goons and arrested by the police. Children have been forcibly stopped
from going to school in the past few days. Girl children have also
been repeatedly molested and physically and verbally abused as they go
out of the site. Activists who visited the area have reported that few
days ago, a woman gave birth in extremely unsafe conditions. Lack of
proper health care and medicines is making life miserable for many
others.
Rape of dalit and adivasi women and girls, who are most vocal and
active in struggles, has become a strong weapon in the hands of those
in opposition. In 2007, we saw the rape and murder of Tapasi Mallick,
a young activist woman who was very active in the struggle at
Nandigram in West Bengal. It is for all these reasons that we urgently
appeal to the National Commission for Women to directly intervene in
this situation and ensure the safety and protection of the women and
children from the police and the company goons.
These events in Chengara fall in the same pattern that we have been
witnessing in recent times; specifically, brutal and violent attacks
happen against dalit and adivasi women in struggles for right over
resources and against displacement by development projects. Whether it
is Muthanga in Kerala or Nandigram in West Bengal, women who stand in
the forefront of the struggle get sexually and physically assaulted in
a violent manner by company goons and also by the police. The entire
country knows that while people engage themselves in a democratic form
of protest, they are forced to face bullets and boots. Women and also
children—always deliberately targeted—face the most brutal assaults
ever.
A Brief Background
The Chengara struggle is a movement by landless dalits, adivasis and
other marginalised peoples that began on August 4th, 2007. It is a
fight to reclaim ownership of land that has been part of a
long-standing promise of the government. To this end, thousands of
families, totaling around 30,000 people from different parts of the
region have moved on to the estate illegally held by Harrison
Malayalam Private Ltd. The impugned land was a part of leasehold to
Harrison Malayalam Ltd., which expired in 1985 and no rents have been
paid to the State exchequer since. The struggle is also a statement
against illegal encroachment of land by a corporate entity with the
tacit support of the state machinery.
The Chengara land struggle therefore is about affirming the prior
claim of these dalits and adivasis to land and hence to transfer legal
ownership from planters to landless toilers.
Response to the Struggle
The fact that the struggle has continued for more than a year now
shows not only the conviction of the people in it but also the
solidarity from other sections of the society. Carried forward under
the banner of SJVSV, the struggle has the support and solidarity of
various civil society groups, movements and citizens across the
country.
While democratic forces across the country were keen for the Kerala
Government to facilitate a dialogue, it is most unfortunate that
brutal and sustained assault on the people has continued unabated and
is continuing to escalate sharply each day. Unfortunately, far from
highlighting this grave injustice against the people and reporting on
their plight, the media has maintained a deafening silence.
The past attempts by the government for discussions were used to
threaten the people with police action. Even as we write this appeal,
the state government is yet to make any serious move to respond to the
demands of the SJVSV in any manner.
The current situation is almost warlike, leading to starvation and
severe health crisis among the people. The health situation of the
people at the site under these circumstances is taking a dangerous
turn since the complete blockade of food, medicines and other
essentials to the area have led to many, including children and the
aged, falling ill in the last 10 days. According to a report in The
Hindu on 18/08/2008 not less than 75 people are affected by water
borne diseases and chicken pox.
Our Appeal
The physical intimidation of the people in the struggle and solidarity
supporters is continuing and increasing day by day. We feel that this
is an illegal and criminal development that is in complete denial of
people’s right to movement and the right to life. We strongly uphold
the right to dissent of the people and urge the Kerala government to
step forward for a dialogue with the people of the Chengara struggle.
We urge the National Commission of Women to:
1. Visit the area immediately and ascertain the situation so that the
NCW can order an impartial and independent inquiry into all
allegations of rape, sexual harassment and other forms of physical
violence.
2. Pressurise the Government of Kerala to initiate criminal
proceedings against the perpetrators of the sexual assault of the four
women at the struggle site on August 7th 2008.
4. Intervene and take immediate action against those responsible for
the blockade, ensure the immediate lifting of the blockade, and
restore normalcy to people’s lives.
Signed:
On behalf of:
Sreerekha, Saheli, New Delhi
Anjali Sinha, Stree Adhikar Sangathan, New Delhi
Harish Dhavan, People’s Union for Democratic Rights, New Delhi
Ranjana Padhi, Kashipur Solidarity Group, New Delhi
Nandini Rao, Jagori, New Delhi
Jaya Sharma, Nirantar, Centre for Gender and Education, New Delhi
Ajita Rao, INSIGHT Foundation, New Delhi
Dr. A.K Jayasree and Dr. Jenny Rowena for Chengara Solidarity, Delhi
A team of representatives from us would like to visit the commission
as early as possible in this matter. We hope you will take this matter
with at most urgency.
Contact Number: Sreerekha 9868120339
Contact Address: Saheli Women’s Resource Centre, Defence Colony
Flyover Market, New Delhi 110024.
Email: saheliwomen@ gmail.com

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Dalit youth set on fire in Madhya Pradesh, dies

Posted by samathain on August 27, 2008

(Siddhartha Kumar)

Source: sify.com

Dalit youth set on fire in Madhya Pradesh, dies
Sunday, 24 August , 2008, 00:05
Last Updated: Sunday, 24 August , 2008, 00:31
Bhopal: A 24-year-old Dalit man, who was set on fire in Madhya
Pradesh’s Burhanpur district allegedly by a group of people including
a leader from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), died late on
Saturday evening, police said.
The incident occurred late on Friday evening when a few people reached
the victim, Anna Meher’s house around 10 pm. They pulled him out of
the house, poured kerosene and set him ablaze.

The police have registered a case against seven people – Sriram,
Kishore, Vijay, Ravindra, Yogendra, Tukaram and Gajanan, who is a BJP
leader.
“Earlier in the day, Anna had a dispute with Gajanan Mahajan over some
trivial issue. He received third degree burns,” Rakesh Khakha,
Burhanpur city superintendent of police, told IANS on phone.
While Sriram, Vijay and Tukaram had been arrested, the police were
looking for the other suspects.

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Caste Atrocity Victims – (Archived)

Posted by samathain on August 15, 2008

[Samatha Link-Caste Atrocity Victims]

Six arrested for assaulting dalit woman

Six arrested for assaulting dalit woman

[Hindustan Times]

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Press Trust Of India

Orissa, August 05, 2008
Six persons were arrested on Tuesday for allegedly assaulting a dalit woman and forcing her to eat human excreta at Polenbasa village, about 120 km from Nuapada, police said.The woman, identified as Uma Bhagat who cooked mid-day meal at an Anganwadi centre in the village under Larka gram panchayat in Boden police station area, was allegedly made to eat human excreta over the week-end due to rivalry between two groups, they said.

Rivalry between the two groups had been brewing after Uma Bhagat was appointed as cook in the anganwadi about a year ago, police sources said adding that her appointment saw some students boycotting the mid-day meals.

Efforts by officials for hammering out an amicable settlement had failed and things took an ugly turn as a verbal dwell took place between Uma and some others on August one when she was gheraoed and made to eat excreta, they said.

A case was subsequently registered and six persons were arrested in connection with the incident, officer in-charge of Boden police station said adding that investigation was in progress.

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Kambalapalli Carnage (and other struggles) (Karnataka)

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Caste Atrocity victim: Chithralekha, Kerala

www.ambedkarscholarship.org

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2007 Caste Atrocity victim: Chithralekha, Kerala
Ms Chithralekha receiving keys of her new vehicle from Ms C.K.Janu of Adivasi Gothra Maha Sabha, on 7th June,2008.

Photo: Ms Chithralekha(woman in red saree) receiving keys of her new vehicle from Ms C.K.Janu of Adivasi Gothra Maha Sabha, on 7th June,2008.

Ambedkar Scholarships is pleased to donate Rs.20,000 for her rehabilitation.
Donors:
Ambedkar Scholarship fund : Rs.5,000
Prof Anandswarup Gadde, Australia: Rs.5,000
Prof Ravishankar, US : Rs.5,000
Mr Karthik Subramanian, US : Rs.5,000

Public Function On 7th June Held at Kannur Concluded Successfully –Chithralekha Rehabilitation Committee, Kannur,Kerala (as reported by Mr K.M.Venugopalan)
Modest function held at the police club auditorium ,Kannur in which Ms.C.K.Janu of Adivasi Gothra Maha Sabha gifted the keys of a new Bajaj diesel auto to Chithraleka was concluded yesterday with a firm resolve and perseverance to support Chithralekha in her continuing struggle for the right to work and live with honour.
A.Vasu (Vasuettan), Dileepraj, V.P.Zuhra , Advocate P.A.Pauran, Mini K Philip, M.K.Jayaraj and Munderi Balakrishnan spoke at the function presided by Dr.D.Surendranath (Chairman, Chithralekha Punaradhivasa Committee).

Jenny Roweena and Carmel Christy, authors of the much debated report”Chithralekha’s Burning Auto: Caste and Gender In the Urban Space of Keralam” ( paper published in Sarai), who had stood all along with the Chithralekha Punaradhivasa Committee in support of this campaign, were also present in the function.

The session was temporarily taken outside the hall, while Ms C.K.Janu handed over the keys of vehicle to Chithralekha , with Chithralekha standing aside the auto. Chithralekha had chosen to name her new vehicle after Mayilamma, the heroic Adivasi woman of anti-coke struggle at Plachimada who passed away last year. This choice of name has the additional relevance that it was Mailamma who had inaugurated the convention for protection of Rights of Dalits and Women
held at Payyanur by the Citizens’ Action Committee in 2006 February in the context of the early stage of struggle by Chithralekha in the aftermath of the grave crime of burning her vehicle.

Texts from messages received from B.R.P.Bhaskar (senior journalist and human rights campaigner), Dr.A.K. Ramakrishnan (Jamia University, New Delhi),Prof.Shiva Shankar(Chennai Institute of Mathematics), J.Robin (Editor,Keraleeyam Monthly), Dr.J.Devika (CDS,Thiruvananthapuram), Benjamin Paul Kaila(ambedkarsholarships),Dr. Hari.P.Sharma of South Asian Network for Secularism and Democracy(SANSAD) were read out to the audience.
Messages in expression of solidarity from Dr.T.T.Sreekumar, Anivar Aravind,.Salim.T.K, Aftab Ellath, K.Ajitha, K.Venu, Sunny Kapikkad, P.V.Ayyappan, Rekha Raj, C.Padmanabhan, K.K.Kochu, Dr.K.M.Seethi(M G U, Kottayam), Dr.A.K.Jayasree, Sarathchandran, Mitesh Domania (US),Dr.Ranjith (Indira Gandhi Open University,New Delhi) ,Deepa V.N, Joy Charles(US),Prof.Alladi Sitaram(Indian Institute of Science, (Bangalore), Prof.Sujata Ramodari Stalin.K (documentary film maker) and many others who though could not directly attend the function but whose support had been reiterated on various occasions throughout the ten months’ long campaign were acknowledged by K.M.Venugopalan, Convener, as he read out the texts of felicitation messages.Earlier,he gave the welcome address .
Mr.P.K.Ayyappan, Treasurer, (Chithralekha Punaradhivasa Committee) proposed the vote of thanks before the session concluded.

A fair presence of media persons, both of print and the electronic, was there throughout the function.
K.M.Venugopalan,
Convener,
Chithralekha Punaradhivasa Committee

PS:
Afew words about the accounts:-
A total sum of Rs 1,53,700 is received as donations as against the targeted amount Rs 1,50,000.00;
the Committee has yet to sit and formally announce the particulars of contributions.
Certain out station cheques received in the later phase have yet to get credited to our Account, and such delay of several weeks in getting the cheques collected in the conventional banking practice is considered” normal”!
There is already an understanding that after realizing the actual expenses incurred in the campaign and the expenses incurred in relation to the purchase ,insurance ,road taxes,body etc of the vehicle,the actual balance left in the Account will be transferred to the personal account of Chithralekha.


The Case:
[You may please read here the original message by the Chithralekha Rehabilitation Committee here, which may help recap the whole story ]:

[Following is the translated text of an appeal released at a press conference on 26-09-07 in Kannur, by the Chithralekha Rehabilitation Committee, Kannur, Kerala ]

Dear friends,
Despite our pride in having achieved 100% literacy, we have to acknowledge sadly that Kerala’s social life continues to be reigned by several unwrit rules of caste and gender, rather than by law. A series of incidents that took place at Edat (Payyanur, Kannur District) starting from organized abuse and harassment of a dalit woman at her workplace, physically attacking her for having complained to the police, and finally seeing her only means of livelihood, an autorikshaw, destroyed by unknown persons setting fire to the vehicle in the dead of night, and to cap these all, a CITU autorikshaw workers’ union coming out openly to defend the accused persons, seems to demonstrate this.

Chithralekha had procured her autorikshaw under the PMRY Scheme in October 2004. Nevertheless, she had to wait for three months before the permission to park her vehicle in the Payyanur College bus stop Autostand as well as the membership in the Union was given to her by the CITU Union.
When finally she did succeed in this, she was greeted by an all-male group of non-dalit autoworkers by the following comments”Look, the pulachi ( female gender for pulaya, name of a prominent SC) is coming with with her auto”.

Since then, Chithralekha had to suffer a host of humiliations and untold sufferings. On 11-10-2005, Ajith, a fellow auto driver tore the hood of her vehicle. She complained to the Union only to be ridiculed and turned back. Further, a complaint made to the Police ended up with her tormentor being warned by the police. Obviously outraged by this daring act of Chithralekha petitioning against a comrade to the police, Ajith along with Pavithran, Naveen and Rameshan physically attacked Chithralekha at her workplace, the auto stand on 14-10-2005 morning. They publicly dragged her out from the vehicle and drove one of the autorikshaws on to her body, which caused injury to her leg serious enough to stay as inpatient in the Payyanur Govt hospital for many days. As they were doing all these acts of brutality, one of them shouted these words” pulachies of your ilk in future shall never ride auto here, and it is the union’s decision”
The above incident has been booked by the Payyanur Police under various sections of IPC as well as under sections of the SC/ST Atrocities (Prevention) Act of 1999. This case with FIR No 367/05 is presently posted for trial before the Special Court (SC/ST Atrocities), Thalassery.
We believe that but for the timely intervention of the District Level Monitoring Committee which is a statutory committee for monitoring such cases of atrocities against dalits, the above mentioned case would not have been booked at all; on the contrary, the dominant caste-gender set up in combination with the generally existing status-quoist bias of individual police officers would have ensured impunity for the offenders and further institutionalization of such crimes.
Even against the successful intervention on the part of the Dist Level Monitoring Committee to get the case booked and properly pursued, collectively expressed hatred and openly displayed hostility against Chithralekha were only heading to a point of vantage. In the night of 31-12-2005, her vehicle was burned by unidentified persons. This incident was registered as FIR No 474/05 in the Payyanur Police Station.
As we hear further stories of intimidation and demoralizing of witnesses by several quarters of vested interests with a view to weakening of these cases as such, we notice that unless the civil society actively involves in the process of bringing justice to the victim, this kind of crimes motivated by caste and gender is going to get institutionalized.
Chithralekha is presently dependent solely on the Monitoring Committee that includes a few civilian(dalit) representatives and the State mechanism available. While it needs to be clearly reiterated that without such State mechanism it would not have been possible to bring the culprits to book under the relevant provisions of law, the ridiculously unwarranted attempts to impose virtual compromise on the victim by intimidating and demoralizing her witnesses and in many other ways need to be resisted. The absolutely unfair interventions of political manipulators to protect the non-dalit, male accuseds from the reach of law, in this case, should be effectively challenged by vigorous pursuit of the Rule Of Law by an informed civil society.
It is worth mentioning in this context, that a citizens’ action committee based at Payyanur was indeed on the scene until April 2006 to support Chithralekha. The committee though succeeded in getting an auto for her on rental basis and as part of their endeavour to restore work to Chithralekha, it became defunct soon after the election campaign for the Kerala Assembly picked up momentum. Due to several reasons, Chithralekha was virtually compelled to return the hired vehicle to its owner. Since then, she had to support herself and her family by going outside for unskilled labour in the building sector, evenwhile she refused to compromise in her determined struggle against the cast-gender hostilities still propagated against her.
On the 29th August of this year, a new initiative to support Chithralekha came to existence by forming a new forum based at Kannur, the District headquarters. The meeting convened by Dr D.Surendranath was personally attended by Mr. K.K.Kochu,the well known dalit leader.Several other prominent dalit activists and intellectuals had also extended thier support to this initiative. This committee was named as Chithralekha Punaradhivasa (Rehabilitation) Committee and it took stock of the situation as a whole.,against the background of conspicuous lack of any collective expression of solidarity with her continuing struggle.The next meeting of this committee on 4-09-2007resolved to extend unconditional support to Chithralekha in her struggle for justice.The committee identified the urgent need of rehabilitating Chithralekha, with the work as well as a nightmares-free workplace restored to her. For this, it was decided to purchase a new autorikhshaw for her by collecting the necessary fund from the people. For carrying out this effectively and transparently, Dr Surendranath(Chairman), Mr.P.K.Ayyappan (Treasurer) and Mr.K.M.Venugopalan (Convenor) would jointly operate an account in the Thalap branch of the Kannur District Central Co-operative Bank in connection with collecting and depositing of a targeted fund of Rs1,50,000/=
While we ourselves fully endorse the above mentioned objectives of the Chithralekha Punaradhivasa Committee,Kannur, we would like to request the entire civil society of Kerala to come forward in support of these causes ,viz; of ending hostilities toward a dalit woman and allowing the law to take the right course on the one hand, and helping rehabilitation of Chithralekha by restoring her means of livelihood and work.

Hence,we request everybody to make contribution to the Cithralekha Rhabilitation Fund either by depositing direct to Chithralekha Rehabilitation Committee SB Ac. No.1 of Thalap branch of CDCC bank of Kannur ( Kannur District Central Co-operative Bank), or by sending in Ac.Payee Cheque or crossed DD payable at Kannur, or Money Order, to the following address :-
Dr.D.Surendranath,

Chairman,

Chithralekha Rehabilitation Committee,

Pallikunnu P.O., Kannur.

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Rajasthan dalits are forced to flee village

Rajasthan dalits are forced to flee village

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ASIANAGE 22 July, 2008 05:09:50

By Our Correspondent

Jaipur, July 22: The dalits of Dhodekapura, in Dholpur district, were forced to flee following persistent threats from “upper caste” Hindus. On July 9, caste Hindus gunned down four dalits on their way to report for National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme work.

The affected dalit families fled Dholpur on Monday saying the caste Hindus continued to threaten them with dire consequences and that their crops were damaged. “Our standing millet crops have been destroyed by influential people and they occupied our well,” said Bhagwan Singh of Dhodekapura.

According to the Dalit Rights Centre in Dholpur, over 40 dalits took shelter in Dholpur as they were terrified. The Dalits took out a procession in Dholpur on Tuesday and staged a dharna outside the collector’s office. “We will not withdraw from here till the administration ensures our protection,” said Satish Lahri of the Dalit Rights Centre. The killings of four dalits at Dhodekapura on July 9 were due to an old dispute with the dalits. A dozen people have been named in the FIR but the police has been able to arrest only two. “It is chief minister Vasundhra Raje’s home district, but she did not visit the affected families,” said Satish Kumar of the Dalit Rights Centre.

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