[Reader-list] Indian People's Tribunal on Untouchability

Shivam Vij mail at shivamvij.com
Thu May 10 00:04:28 IST 2007


Saturday, May 5, 2007
Indian People's Tribunal on Untouchability

30 April 2007

Greetings from kerala

On behalf of Indian People's Tribunal on Untouchability, we are
pleased to invite you to be part of panel of Jurists for the public
hearing on the Untouchability Practices Within the Country.

Forty six organizations from across the country and nine national
networks working for Dalit Rights are holding the People's Tribunal on
Untouchability on 12 and 13 May 2007 in Indian Social Institute, Lodhi
Road, New Delhi to expose the inhuman practices of untouchability that
Dalits, who forms a quarter of population in the country, have to face
everyday in their life.

The tribunal will hear depositions of 40 personal experiences of
untouchability from across India. Two parallel sessions for hearing
the cases will be held in two days and a panel of fifteen prominent
citizens will look into the issue.

Untouchability practices are a reality that the Dalits have to face
everyday in almost every sphere of life. It has become imprinted in
the deeper social psyche of the Indian society, in that it stands more
or less ignored or is being treated as quite natural. We believe that
the opening up of the issue will highlight how the integrated belief
system of casteism still perpetuates practices similar to racism
within the country. Also, the fact is that it is perpetuated in
connivance with the administration and government, and it is hardly
treated as a crime within the country. We should be able to bring into
national and international attention that despite enacting many legal
protective measures within the country, the state has desperately
failed to curb this inhuman practice. Any resistance to this practice
has resulted in the most inhuman atrocities against the community.
Incidents of extreme humiliation, brutalization, maiming, arson, rape,
killing, and acts of torture by the community amongst whom they live
are quite common.

The tribunal will look into the following issues:-
access to public places, discrimination in common services and
criminal justice system; traditional practices like jogini system and
devadasi system; discrimination and ghettoisation in housing, access
to religious religious places, common natural resources, educational
and governmental institutions and work places; implementation of
special component plan; manual scavenging; judiciary and judgments on
caste related issues.

At the end of the tribunal, the groups involved will be meeting the
President, the Prime Minister, the National Human Rights Commission,
Scheduled Caste Commission and the leaders of major national parties
to brief them on the outcome of the Tribunal. The group involved
envisages that the Tribunal will act as a catalyst for influencing the
Government policies and programmes, and hopes to see that the
Government would evolve with newer approaches to address the issue.

The tribunal will be an indicator for civil society to rethink of a
new set of strategies, to compel the State for immediate intervention
to address the issue.

We look forward for your presence in the jury panel.

Thanking You
With high regards,

On behalf of the tribunal

Paul Divakar , Vimal Thorat & Vincent Manoharan Colin Gonsalves
National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights /  Human Rights Law Network



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