`Dalits in Keeripatti still remain ostracised' 


Inquiry prejudiced, says Joint Action Committee 

MADURAI: About 15 Dalit families at Keeripatti in Usalimpatti taluk of
Madurai district continue to be ostracised by the caste Hindus, and
revenue officials' effort to set right the problem is only an

`eyewash,' said the Joint Action Committee against Untouchability. 

Speaking to presspersons here on Wednesday, Henri Tiphagne, executive
director, Peoples' Watch, and Rajni, an advocate, said the inquiry by
revenue officials into the atrocities perpetrated on the Dalits was
"prejudiced" and did not mitigate their condition.

A section of the Dalits, who related their experience, said 15
families who had voted against a common candidate fielded by the
village elders were being prevented from buying groceries, boarding
buses or even using the sanitary complex constructed for them.

They were denied employment by the caste Hindus. As a result, they
found it difficult to obtain provisions or get a job to run their
families.

They demanded that the ostracised families be given food and social
security. They were spending sleepless nights, as they were
intimidated. Miscreants threw stones at their houses under the cover
of darkness.

The April 19 by-election was a nightmarish experience to them. If this
trend continued, the lot of the Dalits would be doomed forever, they
said.

Mr. Henri Tiphagne and Ms. Rajni said there was a gross violation of
the Scheduled Caste\Scheduled Tribe (Prevention of Atrocities) Act in
the village.

The Dalits were even prevented from exercising their franchise on
April 19 and demanded that the officials strictly enforce the SC\ST
(Prevention of Atrocities) Act and initiate action against those who
were behind the violence.

The police were "indifferent" to the plight of the Dalits. "If the
authorities did not take action, we would seek legal remedy under
Section 4 of the IPC (wilful negligence of duty by executive and
police)," Mr. Henri said.

The JAC has planned to hold a human chain agitation in the city on May
11 to highlight the problems of the Dalits. The JAC, comprising more
than 13 organisations, including the Dalit Panthers of India, would
hold a public hearing on the atrocities against the Dalits in June.

http://www.hindu.com/2005/05/05/stories/2005050515430800.htm 

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For every minute you are angry, you lose sixty seconds of happiness.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
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SAVAD RAHMAN 
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