COMBATING BIASES
*Caste as race *
Over the years, the Indian government has been steadfast in its
unwillingness to consider caste-based discrimination as racial
discrimination, despite the many arguments in its favour. Ipshita
Sengupta reports.

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*The Government of India reiterates its position that 'caste' cannot be
equated with 'race' or covered under 'descent' under Article 1 of the
Convention* - India's 15th-19th Periodic Report to the Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD).

*Discrimination based on 'descent' includes discrimination against members
of communities based on forms of social stratification such as caste and
analogous systems of inherited status which nullify or impair their equal
enjoyment of human rights. Therefore, the Committee reaffirms that
discrimination based on the ground of caste is fully covered by Article 1 of
the Convention. *- CERD, concluding observations on India's Periodic Report.


These contradictory statements show where India stands as far as caste-based
discrimination is concerned. In 2002, the United Nations' (UN) Committee on
the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, in its general recommendation
no.29, expanded the meaning of the term 'descent' in Article 1 of the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination (ICERD), to include discrimination based on caste. The
convention, which came into force in 1969, has been ratified by 173
countries, including India. Despite this, and despite the United Nations
Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights reiterating
that discrimination based on work and descent is a form of racial
discrimination, the Indian government's stand on this issue has remained the
same: caste is not race.

The CERD, an independent panel of experts established under the
international convention on racial discrimination, monitors how well
signatories are implementing the convention, through periodic reports
submitted by State parties. The CERD provides "concluding observations" on
these State reports.

India's reluctance to consider the issue seriously is clear from the way it
has treated its responsibilities as a signatory to the international
convention. Though periodic reports are due to the CERD every two years, all
of the reports from 1998 to 2006 were submitted to the committee only in
2006 as a joint 15th-19th periodic report. When this report came up for
review at the CERD's 70th session meeting at Geneva in February-March 2007,
many activists were hoping that there would be a change in the Indian
government's position.

    The CERD has criticised India for failing to provide information on
steps taken to implement anti-discrimination and affirmative action laws and
policies.


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However, it soon became clear that neither the heated debates on
descent-based discrimination at the Durban World Conference against Racism,
Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance in 2001, nor the
criticism that the government has faced from various quarters including the
CERD, and international civil society and Dalit groups in India, have made
any impact. Despite the arguments advanced in favour of treating caste-based
discrimination as racial discrimination, the Indian government has refused
to budge from its stand.

India's joint periodic report detailed the legislative and policy measures
in place currently to address racial discrimination, but did not offer an
impact assessment of these measures. On caste-based discrimination, the
government reiterated its stand that as the Indian Constitution did not
consider caste and race to be the same (Article 15 of the Constitution
prohibits discrimination on grounds of race and caste and lists them as
separate categories), they could not be conflated.

Non-government organisations, individuals and civil society coalitions,
which had submitted alternate reports - known as shadow reports - to the
CERD, rejected the government's stand. These reports mentioned several
instances of caste-based discrimination faced by Dalits.

A joint report by the United States-based Human Rights Watch and Centre for
Human Rights and Global Justice, titled *Hidden Apartheid: Caste
Discrimination against India's 'Untouchables'*, pointed out that more than
165 million persons in India faced discrimination while accessing education,
health, housing, property, employment and equality before the law simply
because of their caste. The report, dated February 2007, documented India's
"systematic failure to respect, protect, and ensure Dalits' fundamental
human rights".

Discussions and dialogues on India's periodic report at the CERD's 70th
session were focused on the issue of caste-based discrimination and the
plight of India's Dalit population. The Indian delegation, which was led by
India's permanent Ambassador to the UN Swashpawan Singh, Solicitor General
Goolam E Vahanvati and academic Dipankar Gupta, among others, tried to
establish on sociological grounds that caste was different from race and
could not be equated under any circumstances. Gupta denied that caste fell
under the term 'descent' as described in the convention. The Indian
delegation's stand digressed from the discussion at hand, which was whether
caste-based discrimination was similar in nature to descent-based
discrimination, and whether the convention covered such discrimination.

The CERD, in its observations on India's report presented at the session,
rejected India's stand on caste-based discrimination. The committee
criticised the government for failing to provide information on steps taken
to implement anti-discrimination and affirmative action laws and policies.
The panel also insisted that the government present such details in its next
periodic report.

The CERD also expressed concern that India did not recognise the country's
tribal population as "distinct groups entitled to special protection under
the Convention". It recommended that India "strengthen its efforts to
eradicate the social acceptance of caste-based discrimination and racial and
ethnic prejudice, eg by intensifying public education and awareness raising
campaigns, incorporating educational objectives of inter-caste tolerance and
respect for other ethnicities, as well as instruction on the culture of
scheduled castes and scheduled and other tribes, adequate media
representation of issues concerning scheduled castes, tribes and ethnic
minorities, with a view to achieving true social cohesion among all ethnic
groups, castes and tribes of India".

Despite CERD's tough stance, India has been unwilling to engage in a
constructive dialogue on caste-based discrimination. Most recently, in April
2008, when the UN Human Rights Council conducted a mandatory review of the
human rights records of its member countries, India stated that caste-based
discrimination was not racial in origin. India's periodic report to the UN's
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), which monitors
the implementation of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights, had a similar tenor. In its concluding observations in a
review of the report, conducted in May 2008, the CESCR noted that India had
failed to address "persistent de facto caste-based discrimination" despite
boasting of several legislative measures.

According to the *Crime in India Report 2006*, prepared by the National
Crime Records Bureau of the Ministry of Home Affairs, the crime rate against
SCs recorded an increase of 3.6 per cent in one year, with the number of
cases reported rising from 26,127 in 2005 to 27,070 in 2006.

The Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act
1989, referred to as the POA Act, aimed at penalising discriminatory acts
against these groups, has remained ineffective. Despite the high incidence
of crime against SC/STs and the strict penal provisions contained in the POA
Act, the number of cases registered under this Act remains low. In 2006,
8581 and 1232 cases were registered across India under the POA Act for
atrocities against SCs and STs respectively. The average conviction rate for
crimes against SCs/STs is also dismal low at 27.6 per cent (SCs) and 28 per
cent (STs), although the charge-sheeting rates are high.

While India's defiance of monitoring mechanisms like the CERD points to a
complete lack of political will to adopt international standards and
implement domestic laws to overcome discrimination, it also points to
another failure. The country's non-cooperation with international
mechanisms, at some level, also points to the failure of the United Nations'
human rights mechanisms to ensure enforcement of international human rights
norms

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