Dalits
Break Through UN Wall of Silence on
Caste
Geneva,
April 19 2005: The UN Commission on
Human Rights today adopted by consensus a decision to
appoint two Special Rapporteurs to tackle the entrenched
problem of caste-based discrimination. The Commission was
endorsing an earlier decision taken by its Sub-Commission
on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights to
conduct a comprehensive analysis of the problem and find
solutions for its eradication. This is the first time a
political body of the UN has referred directly to the
problem, and the decision is seen as a crucial step in the
campaign for justice for South Asia’s Dalits (formerly known
as ‘untouchables’) and communities suffering from similar
forms of discrimination around the world.
In India, the Dalit community numbers around 170
million, but related forms of discrimination are practised
in countries as diverse as Nigeria, Japan, Senegal and
Bangladesh. It is estimated that 260 million people globally
are deprived of their basic rights by this form of
discrimination, referred to in UN circles as ‘discrimination
based on work and descent’.
"Given the enormous number of people facing such an
egregious and systematic denial of their basic rights, it is
surprising that the United Nations has taken so long to
recognise the problem", said Ms. Rikke Nöhrlind,
co-ordinator of the International Dalit Solidarity
Network (IDSN).
Mr. Vincent Manoharan of the National Campaign on
Dalit Human Rights in India welcomed the decision:
"Dalits claim this as a belated victory in the struggle for
international recognition of our plight and welcome the
stance of the new Indian government, which did not stand in
the way of the passing of this resolution."
Dalit women suffer from double discrimination on the
basis of caste and gender. Ms. Ruth Manorama of the
National Federation of Dalit Women said, "This
decision will go a long way towards meeting at the
crossroads the victims of caste discrimination, in
particular untouchable women who experience savage attacks
on a day to day basis, abject poverty and criminal neglect
of the Constitutional directives."
On behalf of the European Union, Ambassador Alphonse
Berns of Luxembourg had earlier encouraged all members of
the Commission on Human Rights "to give the
[Sub-Commission’s] resolution the attention it deserves."
The EU has been supportive of efforts to raise this issue in
the UN bodies.
The Sub-Commission will now undertake a 3-year study,
led by two experts given the title of ‘Special Rapporteurs’,
and will draft a set of Principles and Guidelines to
eliminate this form of discrimination.
The decision of the
Commission comes in the wake of an International
Consultation held in Kathmandu last year on how to address
the problem. The Consultation adopted the Kathmandu Dalit
Declaration, which provides concrete proposals for not
only governments, the UN and development agencies, but also
the private sector, trade unions and international financial
institutions. One of the proposals has now been fulfilled in
the form of the appointment of the Special Rapporteurs. The
relevant UN documents and the Kathmandu Dalit
Declaration are available at www.idsn.org
For
inquiries and comments, please contact Mr. Vincent Manoharan
of NCDHR on +41 765 920 441 or Ms. Rikke Nöhrlind of IDSN on
+45 29 700 630.
Note
for editors
Caste
discrimination is a rigid form of social
stratification based on birth or descent. Caste systems
create hierarchies of social prestige, of labour, of access
to power and of wealth. Quite simply the hazard of which
family one is born into in a caste system pre-determines
ones quality of life. Prevention of inter-marriage between
castes is one of the most strictly enforced rules of the
caste system, ensuring that the system is self-perpetuating.
Those at the bottom of caste systems are considered
untouchable, and should live, work, study and eat separately
from higher caste people.
Caste and related forms of discrimination dehumanise
people in both overt and sinister ways. Dalits and other low
caste communities are considered to be born as ‘polluted’
and ‘polluting’ to their neighbours, and stay this way until
they die. They are discriminated against in every sphere of
life. Their family of origin determines not only their
social status, but also impedes their choice of occupation,
their living conditions, their ability to participate in
social practices and their freedom to marry. Dalits and
other low-caste groups are at the bottom of every social
indicator and can generally expect to be poorer, to be more
illiterate, to have worse jobs, to be victims of violence
and to die younger than other groups in their
societies.
Many countries have established laws and statutory
bodies designed to end such practices, with India’s
Constitutional and other provisions leading the way.
However, the caste system has proven more resilient than
these measures, as the political will to implement the
reforms is grossly insufficient. As a result, when Dalits
suffer violence, forced labour, segregation and humiliation,
their higher caste oppressors simply escape justice. Often
Dalits themselves are arrested when they attempt to have the
laws protecting them implemented. The lynching of 5 Dalits
outside a police post in Haryana, India in 2002 and the
ensuing impunity of the perpetrators offers one example of
the meaninglessness of laws which are ignored at the local
level. Dalits believe that both the measures adopted and
their implementation on the ground should be brought under
the international spotlight.
The
National Campaign for Dalit Human Rights (www.dalits.org) and the
International Dalit Solidarity Network (www.idsn.org) have
been working for a number of years to ensure that caste
discrimination is recognised at the international level. The
organisations see this step as a breakthrough at the
political level in the UN, following great pressure created
by Commission’s special mechanisms and the UN treaty
bodies.
IDSN is a
network of national solidarity networks, national advocacy
groups from affected countries and international
organisations* concerned about caste discrimination and
similar forms of discrimination based on work and descent.
IDSN brings together organisations, institutions and
individuals and links grassroots priorities with
international mechanisms and institutions to make an
effective contribution to the elimination of caste
discrimination.
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