SC-ST House panel refuses Hathras visit
The victim's family has allegedly faced harassment at the hands of the administration and sections of locals |
The parliamentary
committee on the welfare of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes has rejected
a request by some of its members to visit the family of the teen who was
allegedly gang-raped and murdered by “upper caste” [Thakur] men in Uttar
Pradesh’s Hathras district.
Although the
girl passed away on September 29, a week after being brutalised, the 30-member
committee headed by BJP leader Kirit Premjibhai Solanki has no plans of
visiting the family, which has allegedly faced harassment at the hands of the
administration and sections of locals.
The committee
had met on October 20 to discuss representation of SC/ST employees at Delhi
University when some of the members requested the chairman to allow a visit to
the Hathras family. Solanki, however, rejected the proposal, committee sources
said.
“When the
request was made to visit the victim’s family, the chairman did not agree. He
said the Speaker would not agree to such a trip. He also said that a visit to
the victim’s family was under the jurisdiction of the National Commission for
Scheduled Castes (NCSC),” a panel source said.
According to the
source, the parliamentary committee has the power to tour any place to protect
the interests of SCs and STs. The source said the Hathras incident was a fit
case for a visit to inspect if the family was safe.
“People from the
dominant community are openly giving threats. A visit by the committee would
have sent a message to the police administration and helped the family in terms
of safety and protection,” the source said.
Solanki told The
Telegraph on Tuesday: “There is no plan to visit Hathras.” No further questions
could be asked as he hung up.
Another
committee source said that while one member had raised the Hathras issue and
suggested a visit, two others had supported the proposal. Sixteen members,
including the chairman, were present at the meeting.
The second
source said the NCSC could not undertake a visit as the commission currently
had no member. The government has not appointed anyone to the NCSC in the past
five months.
Ambedkarite
scholars said parliamentarians elected from reserved seats were not truly
representing the community. The scholars supported the idea of separate
electorates that Bhimrao Ambedkar had proposed 90 years ago, before accepting
political reservation in constituencies. Currently, 131 Lok Sabha seats are
reserved for SCs and STs.
Tanoj Meshram, a
former civil servant and currently a PhD student of social policy at Heller
School for Social Policy and Management at Brandeis University in the US, said
caste atrocities were yet to feature on the political agenda of parties, suggesting
that mainstream political forces were not committed to the ideology of social
justice as envisaged in the Constitution.
“Unfortunately,
most of the individual SC candidates contesting on the tickets and strength of
mainstream political parties show little commitment to social justice,” Meshram
said, adding that a separate electorate for SCs would have produced leaders with
commitment to the cause of the community.
“MPs and MLAs
winning from seats reserved for SCs are not truly representing the community.
If there had been a separate electorate for depressed classes that Ambedkar had
wanted, the Dalit and tribal communities would have got 131 committed
parliamentarians in the Lok Sabha. The government cannot afford to have an
indifferent attitude toward these communities,” Meshram said.
Under separate
electorates, SCs and STs would have elected their own representatives from pre-identified
constituencies. Such a process could have neutralised the influence of upper
caste Hindus who constitute the majority in a parliamentary or Assembly seat.
This is contrary
to the current system of reserved seats where SC or ST candidates fight
elections and people from all communities exercise their franchise together.
M.K. Gandhi had
opposed the idea of a separate electorate for depressed classes as he saw it as
an attempt to divide the Hindu society along caste lines and considered it
against Indian nationalism.
Dr Sanjay
Jadhav, a Nashik-based medical surgeon and Ambedkarite scholar, said that when
Ambedkar was leading a movement for depressed classes, Gandhi and the Congress
had foisted rebel untouchable sub-castes to create an alternative leadership.
Jadhav said the
indifferent attitude towards SCs and STs cut across party lines. The Janata
Party had in 1977 made Jagjivan Ram, a Dalit, their prime ministerial candidate
but gone with Moraji Desai after winning the election, Jadhav pointed out.
“Dalits are never given respect or the positions they deserve. The indifferent attitude is across parties,” Jadhav said.
[Source: SC-ST House panel refuses Hathras visit]
0 Comments