*FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
*AHRC-STM-087-2010
May 28, 2010

*A Statement by the Asian Human Rights Commission *

*INDIA: Country's conscience nailed in the gutter of caste *

The stoning to death of 22-year-old Swapna and her husband 28-year-old
Sunkari Sriniwas on 23 May by Swapna's family near Krishnajiwadi village,
Nizamabad, Andhra Pradesh state is one more proof to the stark reality of
the continuing practice of caste based discrimination and caste prejudices
in India. Swapna belongs to a Hindu upper caste family. Her parents and
relatives were opposed to Swapna's marriage with Sriniwas, a Dalit.

The family believed that one of them marrying a lower caste is a shame upon
the family and that other upper caste families will ostracise them for
having a relationship with an untouchable.

Despite her family's resistance, Swapna married her fiancée Sriniwas in
March this year. Swapna's family wrecked vengeance upon the couple by
storming into Sriniwas' house, dragging the newlywed couple out and later
stoning them to death just outside their village. A case of murder is
registered against the suspects by the local police.

The brutal murder of Swapna and Sriniwas must shame every person who cares
to be called an Indian.

While India has been defiant and sensitive to national and international
criticism on everything related to caste based discrimination, it has
refused to show similar sensitivity in dealing with the issue at the
domestic level. Though the country had enacted laws to counter caste based
discrimination, of which some are currently under review, like the *Scheduled
Castes and Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989* it is a reality,
that at the very minimum, the implementation of these legislations are half
hearted and often left at the mercy of caste prejudiced law enforcement
officers.

Though India boasts about some of its senior bureaucrats, a former
President, Chief Ministers and constitutional court judges including the
former Chief Justice as members of the Dalit community, in reality, the
effect has been only symbolic. The ordinary Dalit continues to face
discrimination and social stigmatisation throughout the country. The fact
that the parents of a woman went to the extent of stoning their own daughter
to death for marrying an untouchable Dalit, underlines the fact that mere
legislations will not end caste based discrimination. The incident also is
the grim reminder to the fact that caste prejudice is deep-rooted in India.

Caste based discrimination is widely considered to be worse than slavery and
any other forms of discrimination known to human. Over the period of the
past 3000 years, it has had its influence sans continents. While caste, its
parallels and their influence have been mostly wiped off from the society in
most parts of the world, in South Asia, in particular Nepal and India, caste
remains the singular denominator with which individuals are evaluated in the
society. To deal with such a deep-rooted violence mere law making is not
enough.

A legal text is only the mere codification of certain principles, norms and
rules. In punitive jurisprudence, a law could also be a deterrent against a
crime. But the deterrence factor of the crime, in this case, caste based
discrimination as referred to in the *Scheduled Castes and Tribes
(Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989*, depends upon the effectiveness in the
execution of the law. This is where India and its entire justice
institutions and policies have failed.

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has documented cases over the past
ten years, where atrocities committed against the members of the lower caste
were refused to be registered as crimes at police stations. The general
failure of the law enforcement mechanism in the country coupled with the
caste prejudice of the officer who runs the system poses a double walled
challenge to a complainant who would want to register and investigate his
complaint and prosecute a person who has committed a crime that is covered
under the *Scheduled Castes and Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989*.


In addition to the lack of willingness of the government to root out caste
prejudice is the omnipresence of the caste prejudiced mind in government
policies. One of the worst forms of caste based discrimination is the
continuing practice of manual scavenging. The Indian version of manual
scavenging is literally carrying of human excreta on heads by the Dalits, in
particular by the members of the lowest of the lower caste communities.

In spite of a dozen laws preventing manual scavenging the practice continues
in India due to more than one reason, of which an important one is the lack
of adequate sanitary facilities in most parts of the country. Investment in
proper sanitation facilities is a factor conveniently overlooked even in the
national capital, New Delhi. Of course a government has no reason to spend
money on sanitation if there are a few million lower caste persons destined
to do the job of scavenging for a meagre pay.

The lower caste has also been let down by their own leaders like Ms.
Mayawati, the current Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, who have spent
millions worth of tax payers' money to erect her own statues and that of her
deceased political mentor.

Whenever there has been a national and/or international debate on the issue,
so far the government of India has prevented any form of intervention on the
issue from external agencies like the United Nations on the ground that
caste and dealing with caste is an internal matter of the country. This is
similar to the arguments of the Sri Lankan President, Mr. Mahinda Rajapaksa,
and Mr. Robert Gabriel Mugabe the President of Zimbabwe that ethnic and
other state sponsored violence is a matter of internal discussion of their
respective countries and that no external help is required to sort it out.

The unique and staunch resistance posed by the government of India against
any form of assistance to deal with caste based discrimination in India has
resulted in the practice being allowed to continue unabated. Though, it is
not for an external agency to resolve a domestic issue, but receiving some
help would not hurt.

There are thousands of couples and individuals who have faced similar fate
as that of Swapna and Sriniwas in India. There will be many more. But the
ultimate blame for allowing such dehumanising practice to continue must be
upon the governments that have ruled India for the past 62 years.

Caste prejudice and caste based violence in India can be addressed. But that
requires a change in the government's Brahminical mind, irrespective of its
political colour. Until that happen India will have to bear the burden of
carrying a broom of shame perpetually tied to its back.

# # #

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