*US Congress holds hearing on India's Dalits*
**
http://www.dawn.com/2005/10/08/int3.htm

WASHINGTON, Oct 7: The US Congress held an unprecedented hearing on Thursday
on India's Dalits, once known as the 'untouchables', describing it as a key
human rights issue.

Some 200 million of India's estimated population of a billion people are
Dalits, occupying the bottom rung in Hinduism's 2,500-year-old caste system,
and the hearing was told that they faced discrimination, abuse, torture and
even death because of the family into which they were born.

"To keep nearly a quarter of one's population in sub-human status is not
only a grotesque violation of human rights, but it is a formula for economic
and political stagnation as well," said Republican New Jersey Representative
Christopher Smith, who chaired the one-day hearing.

He said that as the United States sought to develop a strategic partnership
with India, including civilian nuclear cooperation, 'we must not lose sight
of India's serious human rights problems'.

The Indian government "condones, ignores and in some instances, has even
promoted ... massive catalogues of human rights violations," said Smith, who
heads a House of Representatives human rights panel that organized the
hearing.

"All too often, enforcement of laws protecting human rights has been weak or
non-existent," he said.

While most Dalits lived in extreme poverty, Smith said, Hindu extremists
resented gains made by this oppressed group which benefited from education
and medical programs launched by Christian missionaries.

"Converts to Christianity and Christian missionaries are particularly
targeted, as violence against Christians often goes unpunished," Smith said,
adding that many states had adopted anti-conversion laws in violation of
India's constitutional protection for religious freedom.

This is the first time Congress has held a hearing on the plight of the
Dalits, said Nanci Ricks, the executive director of the Colorado-based Dalit
Freedom Network, among groups which helped organize the event.

Congressional sources said Christian-based groups had lobbied Republican
legislators to hold the hearing, entitled "India's Unfinished Agenda:
Equality and Justice for Victims of Caste System."

Asked to comment on the event, a spokesman for the Indian embassy in
Washington said New Delhi had taken various steps, including making
provisions in the country's charter, to help the Dalits.

"As a vibrant democracy, India has in place constitutional safeguards as
well as an active affirmative action program to address the problems of the
weaker sections of society, including the Dalits," spokesman Venu Rajamony
said.

"These efforts are continuing and their positive results are visible to
all," he said.

Amnesty International's Asia advocacy director T. Kumar told the hearing
that the Indian government should fully enforce laws against discrimination
on the basis of caste and descent, and rein in groups, including the police,
which he said had discriminated against Dalits.

"This culture of impunity must end. Until India's 'hidden apartheid' is
truly and completely abolished, the world's largest democracy cannot hope to
make truly substantive progress towards liberty for all," he said. —AFP




-- 
Ranjit

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