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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Urgent Appeals <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Jul 17, 2009 at 10:46 AM
Subject: INDIA: Police in Gujarat support the beating and social exclusion
of three Dalit families
To: [email protected]


ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION - URGENT APPEALS PROGRAMME

Urgent Appeal Case: AHRC-UAC-083-2009

 <http://www.ahrchk.net/ua/support.php?ua=AHRC-UAC-083-2009 >

17 July 2009

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INDIA: Police in Gujarat support the beating and social exclusion of
three Dalit families

ISSUES: Caste-system; police negligence; corruption

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Dear friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received information
that a local feudal leader and his family, the Khans, who control
affairs in Ingoli village, Gujarat, are behind the social ostracism
of three Dalit families. After a young Dalit man complained to the
police of being beaten by a group of Khans, his relatives were beaten
again and the community told that fines would be dealt out to anyone
associated with the man's family in any way. The family members have
lost their jobs and are struggling to find food. Though caste-based
discrimination is a crime in India, the police initially refused to
register a case when approached by the victims. After registering the
case under pressure, officers have failed to take further action.

CASE DETAILS: (According to Navsarjan, a human rights organisation
based in Gujarat)

The first in this series of incidents happened on 21 January 2009 at
about 4pm, when Mr. Kiranbhai Natubhai Parmar, a Dalit living in
Ingoli village, was returning home from work in a public bus. He and
the seven accused, the male members of the Khan family, were all
standing inside the bus, but when a passenger disembarked, Kiranbhai
sat down. One of the accused then called him a 'dhedh' (a derogatory
term suggesting lower caste) and declared that as long as the 'Khan
Sahibs' (Khan Masters) were on the bus, a 'dheda' cannot sit. When
Kiranbhai refused to give up his seat the seven punched and kicked
him.

The Khan family is from the Pathan community and enjoys a higher
social status within the Muslim community. In India, caste based
discrimination has its parallels in all religious groups.

Neither the driver nor the conductor interceded, and they were forced
to stop and leave Kiranbhai on the road between Trasad and Pisavada
villages, about 7km from his village, after being threatened by the
Khan men. The victim was able to get a three-wheeler and returned
home at about 6pm, but pain from his internal injuries lasted several
months.

The next day Kiranbhai, his mother Hiraben Parmar and his father
Natubhai Tishabhai Parmar, went to lodge a complaint at Dholka Police
Station, but literally watched as an officer call the Khans to inform
them of the complaint. They then accepted the family s application
but refused to register a case, advising them to go home; if they
pushed on with the complaint, they said, the family would not likely
be able to stay in their village. The Khan family later called them,
offering to take no action against them if they took back their
complaint, which the Parmars refused.

On February 5 the Khans announced a gathering at the local mosque,
where they decreed that, beginning on February 6, anyone who
associated with Natubhai s family or his two brothers  families
(Ishwarbhai being the elder brother and Galabhai the younger) by
offering them work or selling or giving them any goods, would be
fined 5000 rupees. The three families determined to stay and fight
the boycott.

However on February 9, the water pipes to the fields owned by the
three brothers were cut off. On March 8, Ishwarbhai was badly beaten
by 11 members of the Khan family after he rented a wheat threshing
machine from a nearby village. The operator had stopped shortly after
a call from a Khan who threatened to destroy the machine and burn the
operator alive, and when Ishwarbhai called the police he was taken to
Majid Khan s home by an officer called Jasaratbhai. The policeman
entered the house and allowed Ishwarbhai to be beaten with wooden
sticks for about fifteen minutes before taking him back home.

The police officer is from the Koli Patel community of the state,
which is above the Dalits in the caste hierarchy.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

When Navsarjan staff members met family members on June 6, the
victims complained that each of their earning members had lost his
job within the past four months, including Kiranbhai who was
dismissed on 23 January. None have been able to find work since.
Kiranbhai finally stopped trying when even a company, Cadila, thirty
kilometres away from the village refused him a job due to the events.
Navsarjan informs us that the Khan family's grip on the community is
related to their and their friends' control of the water sources in
the area. Most of the shops in the village are also under the
influence of the Khan family and the family have survived on food
donated by other Dalit families in neighbouring villages. But beyond
this other Dalits are too scared to be of help. The only stable
income for the three families is from the salary of Ishwarbhai s son,
Jitendrabhai, who is a primary school teacher in a government school
in a neighbouring village, Ganol. The three families have also been
unable to provide fodder or water for their three buffaloes.

The families continue to receive threats and intimidation from the
Khan family, and they are afraid to go to places under the influence
of the Khan families in the village. The women are verbally harassed
when they go to fetch firewood.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION:

Social ostracism tends to meet Dalits whenever there has been an
attempt by one to assert his rights and to challenge the status quo.
By wholly ostracising Dalit communities and preventing their access
to the law, social boycotts have been a powerful tool for continuing
the oppression; yet public awareness of the issue has been minimal.
Media attention is given to more shocking atrocities. Yet social
boycotts are powerful precisely because they involve the mundane.

These boycotts impinge on the daily lives of the targeted Dalit
communities, making every small effort more difficult, wearing down
morale and community cohesion and reminding Dalits that they live on
the fringes of society. Families go for months without any source of
income and must depend on the charity of others, or are forced to
travel long distances daily for labour at low daily wages. The basic
necessities can only be obtained from great distances. Women like
Hiraben, a female member of the three ostracised families, bear the
brunt of coping with constant threats to themselves and their family.


The case also shows that untouchability is practiced even outside the
Hindu communities. In India, the caste system is so ingrained that it
extends to Hindus, Muslims, and Christians alike.

The impunity enjoyed by the Khan family shows the problems Dalits
have in gaining access to the law. The case and a First Information
Report (FIR) for assaulting Kiranbhai were only registered after the
intervention by an NGO and on orders from the District Superintendent
of Police (DSP) and Police Sub-inspector, nineteen days later. The
proper provisions of law under the Scheduled Castes and Tribes
(Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 were not included in the FIR.
Though the FIR for the beating of Ishwarbhai was registered promptly,
the names of accused were excluded by the police. One excluded accused
is Majid Khan, the most prominent member of the Khan family in Ingoli.
Though all the accused named on the FIR were arrested, bail was
granted within a few hours. The two case numbers are 16/2009 and
20/2009, Dholka police station.

The government has provided a scheme for compensation and
rehabilitation in such cases, but again the problem is one of access.
In order to receive benefits, the social boycott must first be
officially declared by the Social Welfare Office (SWO). Though these
boycotted families visited the SWO to get such a declaration, one has
not been issued. Provisions of compensation and rehabilitation are
essential to fighting a social boycott, and strengthening the ability
of Dalit communities to gain access to the rights due to them.

SUGGESTED ACTION:

Please send letters to the authorities named below expressing your
concern in this case. The AHRC is also sending a letter to the
Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance calling for an
intervention in this case.

To support this appeal please click here:
<http://www.ahrchk.net/ua/support.php?ua=AHRC-UAC-083-2009 >

----------------------------------------------------

SAMPLE LETTER:

Dear _________,

INDIA: Police in Gujarat support the beating and social exclusion of
three Dalit families

Names of victims:

1. Kiranbhai, son of Natubhai Tishabhai Parmar

2. Ishwarbhai Tishabhai Parmar

3. Galabhai

4. Natubhai

5. Mrs. Hiraben Parmar

6. Jitendrabhai

And the members of their families.

The victims named above are residing at Ingoli village, Dholka
Taluka, Ahmedabad District, Gujarat

Name of alleged perpetrators:

1. Majid Khan

2. Abdulkhan Akabarkhan Pathan

3. Nabikhan Salimkhan Pathan

4. Aveshkhan Allaudinhan Pathan

5. Vilayatkhan Allaudinkhan Pathan

6. Subekhan Kalekhan Pathan

7. Divankhan Kalekhan Pathan

8. Imamkhan Mungalkhan Pathan

9. Ahemadkhan Amirkhan Pathan

11. Sirajkhan Ahemadkhan Pathan

12. Abbaskhan Ahmedkhan Pathan

13. Rahemadkhan Husenkhan Pathan

Date of incident: Ongoing since 21 Janury, 2009

Place of incident: Ingoli village, Dholka Taluka, Ahmedabad District,
Gujarat

I am writing to express my concern about the case of assault and of
systematic social ostracism practiced against the members of three
Dalit families, reported from Ingoli village, Dholka Taluka,
Ahmedabad District, Gujarat.

I am informed that a feudal family, the Khan family, in the village
is behind the incident. I am aware that the reason for social
ostracism of the families stems from caste based discrimination
practiced in acute forms across Gujarat, particularly in the rural
villages. The victims are currently struggling to make a living, and
their access to legal remedy has been repeatedly denied.

I am informed that during the course of the incidents, starting from
an assault upon a Dalit, the first victim named above, the victims
and the members of their families have been abused, assaulted and
traumatised by the perpetrators. I am informed that the victims even
cannot engage in regular farming in the village, cannot buy food or
work; they are surviving from donations of other Dalits in the area.
I am also aware that whenever the victims complained to the police,
the police, instead of helping the victims and investigating the
crime that they reported and taking actions against the accused, has
protected the accused and further aided their actions. On one
occasion, a police officer even delivered a victim to the house of
the accused and let him be badly beaten by eleven men before driving
him home.

Two cases are registered in two different occasions against the
accused, crimes 16/2009 and 20/2009, Dholka. I am aware that the
police have done a shoddy job in drafting the FIR, and have
intentionally omitted the names of the primary accused person, Mr.
Majid Khan, and some other persons from the case.

I therefore request that:

1. An inquiry be ordered about the social ostracism practiced against
the victims in Ingoli village by the Social Welfare Office, and the
findings made public;

2. If the allegations are true, the victims be paid appropriate
compensation and their rehabilitation ensured;

3. The statements of the victims be immediately recorded by the
police, by an officer of a rank not below that of the Deputy
Superintendent of Police;

4. The investigation in Crime 16/2009 and 20/2009 of Dholka Police
Station be conducted by an officer of a rank not below that of Deputy
Superintendent of Police;

5. A proper case be registered under the provisions of the Scheduled
Castes and Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 against all
the accused; and

6. A separate inquiry be carried out about the allegations of police
corruption involving the officers stationed at Dholka Police Station,
their dereliction of duty and their acquiescence to the crime, with
the criminals and the erring officers punished.

Yours sincerely,

----------------

PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTERS TO:

1. Secretary of Department of Social Justice and Empowerment

Government of Gujarat

Block No.5, 8th Floor

Sachivalaya, Gandhinagar

Gujarat

INDIA

2. Directorate of Scheduled Caste Welfare

Secretary of Department of Social Justice and Empowerment

Government of Gujarat

Block No.5, 8th Floor

Sachivalaya, Gandhinagar

Gujarat

INDIA

3. Director General of Police

Police Bhawan Sector   18

Gandhinagar

Gujarat 382 009

INDIA

Fax: + 91 177 23253918

4. 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: [email protected]

5. Chairperson

National Human Rights Commission

Faridkot House, Copernicus Marg

New Delhi 110001

INDIA

Fax + 91 11 2338 6521

E-mail: [email protected]

6. Chairperson

National Commission for Scheduled Castes

5th Floor

Lok Nayak Bhawan

Khan Market

New Delhi 110 003

INDIA

E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>

--------------------------

Thank you.

Urgent Appeals Programme

Asian Human Rights Commission ([email protected])

 <http://www.ahrchk.net/ua/support.php?ua=AHRC-UAC-083-2009 >


-----------------------------
Asian Human Rights Commission
19/F, Go-Up Commercial Building,
998 Canton Road, Kowloon, Hongkong S.A.R.
Tel: +(852) - 2698-6339 Fax: +(852) - 2698-6367


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Battula Karthik Navayan,
Advocate,
H.No. 21-7-761,
Opp.High Court Post Office,
Gansi Bazar, Hyderabad,
PIN-500002, AP.
Cell:09346677007,
email:[email protected] <email%[email protected]>
http://karthiknavayan.blogspot.com/
http://www.orkut.co.in/Main#Profile.aspx?uid=10379805095932756525



-- 
Battula Karthik Navayan,
Advocate,
H.No. 21-7-761,
Opp.High Court Post Office,
Gansi Bazar, Hyderabad,
PIN-500002, AP.
Cell:09346677007,
email:[email protected] <email%[email protected]>
http://karthiknavayan.blogspot.com/
http://www.orkut.co.in/Main#Profile.aspx?uid=10379805095932756525

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