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  1. #1
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    Default Why are Dalits in Narendra Modi's India angry?

    Four years ago, a group of upper-caste men arrived at Mehul Vinodbhai Kabira's modest two-room home in Gujarat and threatened to burn it down.
    Bhayla is a nondescript village of around 450 low slung brick-and-cement homes straddling a highway dotted by pharmaceutical, engineering and bio-tech factories.
    Most of the homes in this dense village are owned by land-owning upper castes, but around 70 belong to Dalits (formerly known as untouchables) like Mr Kabira, who form the lowest rung of India's harsh caste hierarchy.
    Mr Kabira's crime? He dared to park his newly-bought auto-rickshaw for passengers near the village at the bus stop, which also doubled up as its three-wheeler stand.
    His parents worked all their lives as scavengers, collecting manure, but their son had decided to shun the indignity of a lowly caste-based occupation. Instead, he took out a loan and started plying a three-wheeler.
    "Most of the auto-rickshaws here are owned by upper-caste men. They couldn't tolerate a Dalit plying his trade at the bus stand. So they beat me up and threatened me," he says.
    Mr Kabira did not take any chances. He left the village with his family to live with a relative some 15km (nine miles) away and drove his three-wheeler. When he returned to Bhayla in 2014, he sold off his auto-rickshaw, paid back his loan and signed up as a 217 rupees-a-day ($3; ?2.40) contract worker in the "housekeeping" - a euphemism for a cleaning job - at a pharmaceutical factory.
    'Increased conflict'

    A few houses away, Dayabhai Kanabhai Kabira, 42, faced the ire of upper-caste neighbours in a different way. A canny farmer, he had inherited two acres of farm land from his father, and sold it to buy a four-acre plot some 40km away to augment his income.
    As his joint family grew, he built a second storey on his tiny plot to accommodate a growing joint family of a dozen people into four-and-a-half crowded rooms. His next door neighbour, an upper-caste farmer who lives in a shiny three-storey house, promptly built a 20ft (6m) high "caste" wall between the two homes.
    "They built the wall so they didn't have to see my face any longer," says Mr Kabira.
    Image copyright Kannagi Khanna Image caption Dayabhai Kanabhai Kabira is a Dalit farmer Image copyright Kannagi Khanna Image caption ...who built a second storey on his tiny plot to accommodate his growing joint family Image copyright Kannagi Khanna Image caption ...after which his upper-caste neighbour built a 20ft wall between the two houses Dalit lives have improved in Gujarat - and all over India - and many upper-caste people are finding it difficult to digest this. "Conflict increases where social conditions [for Dalits] may be getting slightly better," says Pratap Bhanu Mehta of the Centre for Policy Research, a leading think-tank.
    Traditional occupations

    In the past, conflicts between Dalits and upper castes were restricted to fights over land, wages, water, housing and the practice of untouchability.
    But earlier this month, things took a new, devious turn in Gujarat, one of India's most prosperous states, ruled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's BJP for more than a decade.
    A video surfaced showing four Dalit men being assaulted by zealous "cow protection" vigilantes. Their crime was that they were doing their caste job of skinning a dead animal. (Many Hindus consider cows sacred and the slaughter of the animal is banned in many Indian states. There have been attacks across India where Muslims have been accused of eating or smuggling beef.)
    A night patrol with India's cow protection vigilantes
    Angry Dalits came out in protest and the parliament in Delhi was in uproar. Some 30 Dalits, including women, have tried to take their own lives - and one has died - since the incident.
    On Sunday, tens of thousands of community members pledged to boycott some of their traditional tasks, including the disposal of dead animals and manual cleaning of sewers.
    Image copyright Kanaggi Khanna Image caption There are more than 70 Dalit homes in Bhayla village Image copyright AFP Image caption Dalits have threatened to boycott some of their traditional tasks, including the disposal of dead animals However, atrocities against Dalits are nothing new in Gujarat, the birthplace of former India leader Mahatma Gandhi, who waged a campaign against untouchability all his life.
    But, as social scientist Ghanshyam Shah says, even Gandhi was helpless when schools in Gujarat set up by organisations owing allegiance to his ideals refused to admit Dalit students. The state saw some of the earliest upper-caste agitations against affirmative action for the Dalits in the 1980s.
    Rising violence

    Gujarat has only 2.3% of India's 200 million Dalits - 14th most populous state for the community - yet it ranks high in terms of atrocities against them, with more than 1,000 cases of "crimes" against Dalits recorded in 2015.
    Between 1990 and 2015, 536 Dalits were murdered in Gujarat and 750 Dalit women raped. The conviction rate is abysmal: suspects in 95 of 100 cases are freed, according to one study. Eleven districts remain officially declared as "atrocity prone" for Dalits since 1981.
    "Dalits are protesting. They are asking questions, filing right to information applications, petitioning authorities and quizzing village council heads," says Dalit rights activist Martin Macwan. "Upper castes are getting jittery and the violence continues."
    His organisation Navsarjan Trust carried out a four-year-long study - published in 2010 - recording 98 untouchability practices in nearly 1,600 villages in Gujarat.
    Most of the findings were startling, for example:

    • More than 90% of the villages banned temple entry to Dalits
    • 54% of government schools had a separate queue for Dalit children for the midday school lunch
    • 64% of village councils had Dalit members sitting separately and being given separate tea cups or glasses
    • In 96% of villages, Dalits did not have access to burial grounds

    Image copyright Kannagi Khanna Image caption Mehul Vinodbhai Kabira was threatened by upper caste men in his village Image copyright Kannagi Khanna Image caption ...forcing his family to leave the village for two years But the recent violence against the Dalits, according to Mr Shah, is rooted in a shrill campaign by radical Hindu groups "telling people what to eat, drink, dress and monitor their behaviour".
    Critics say the self-styled "cow protection" vigilantes are running extortion rackets and running amok even as Prime Minister Modi maintains a curious silence.
    The agitation in Gujarat may not hurt the BJP in polls much - a third of Dalit voters have voted for the Congress party in the recent past. But, as psephologist Sanjay Kumar says, it might hurt the party's electoral prospects in Uttar Pradesh and Punjab, two states with large Dalit populations and which go to the polls early next year.
    "It is a canary in the mine," warns Mr Mehta. "There is deep social conflict bubbling from below."
    This cannot be good news for Mr Modi.

  2. #2
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    Seriously?
    He who laughs last probably didn't get the joke.

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    Yes they take their caste system very seriously in India, if you thought South Africa used to be bad then think again. During the British rule of India the British used the caste system to define the jobs that people were given and so helped it along, until the 1920's that was. During teh early years of British rule passed laws such as the Land Alienation Act in 1900 and Punjab Pre-Emption Act in 1913, listing castes that could legally own land and denying equivalent property rights to other census-determined castes. *shrug*

    Just one thought for them though - as they kill off the lower caste people, they should recognise that the caste that they belong to may one day be the lowest of the low.
    My master plan is to live forever..... going to plan so far
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    Any Idea what the caste system in England is Gaston?

    I can only think of them that have and them that don't ave!
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    You'd be more or less right, but those that have in the UK don't kill you because you owe them 17 pence. Killing would be too easy, instead they take you to court, make your life a misery, then send in the bailiffs to collect the one ?15,00.017 that you owe with costs, and finally after taking all your stuff they take your house, make you homeless and finally jobless; at which point you'd likely wish they'd killed you for the 17 pence.


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    My master plan is to live forever..... going to plan so far
    Despite the cost of living, it's still very popular.
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