---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: battini rao <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Jun 9, 2017 at 11:07 PM
Subject: PADS Statement on Continuing Caste Violence in Saharanpur, UP
To: ram puniyani <[email protected]>


Here is a statement of Peoples Alliance for Democracy and Secularism
(P.A.D.S) "On Continuing Caste Violence in Saharanpur, UP". We are
submitting it to you for favor of publication and circulation in your
journal for which we will be much obliged.
Thanking you.

With Regards,
 Battini Rao
 Convener,
 People's Alliance for Democracy and Secularism (PADS)
 Delhi
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Public Statement on Continuing Caste Violence in Saharanpur, UP

People's Alliance for Democracy and Secularism



Fifty five Dalit houses were burnt down during the afternoon of May 5 in
Shabbirpur village of Saharanpur in northern UP. Attackers belonged to the
dominant Rajput community of the area. They were armed with swords, spears,
and lathis, and numbered about three thousand. Several other houses were
looted, and fifteen motorcycles were burnt. Twelve Dalits received serious
injuries. One young Rajput man died of asphyxiation according to post
mortem. The attack continued for five hours.



Shabbirpur is 26 km from the Saharanpur city, the district head quarter.
Police was in the village even before the attack. They were called by the
village pradhan, a Dalit himself, earlier in the day to intervene in an
altercation between the two communities. Rajuts that day were celeberating
the jayanti of Maharana Pratap, a medieval king of Mewar principality of
Rajasthan, well known for his opposition to Mughals. Arguments started when
Dalits objected to the loud DJ music of the Rajput procession near their
Ravidas temple. They also argued that Rajputs did not have the permission
from district administration to take out a public procession. The argument
was in continuation of a previous alterncation on 14 April, when the
Rajputs of the village did not allow a procession of Dalits on Ambdekar
Jayanti. Later on 24 April, Dalits were again prevented from putting a bust
of Ambedkar in their Ravidas temple. Clearly, in all these events Rajputs
were asserting their domination over village affairs, while Dalits were
trying to show their autonomy from this very domination. After the police
intervention the Rajput procession with music reportedly left for a public
function at Shimlana village five km away. The news of altercation spread
fast via social media, and in no time the armed crowd of Rajputs attacked
Dalits. Reportedly, while  the crowd was attacking Dalits and destroying
their property, the district SSP, the highest  police official of the area,
was close by with three companies of policemen. Yet, the police did not
intervene.



Dalits called for a mass gathering on 9 May in Saharanpur city. District
administration denied them permission, and police baton charged gathered
people. In retaliation a police post and some buses were burnt down by the
crowd. Police arrested many functionaries of Bhim Sena, a dalit outfit.
Arrest warrants were issued against its founder president Chandrasekhar
Azad Ravan, who went underground. Nevertheless, the Bhim Sena managed to
organise a massive rally of Dalits of UP at Jantar Mantar in the national
capital on 21 May, where its president also spoke.  On 23 May a dalit youth
returning from a public  meeting of Ms Mayawati, the former Dalit CM of UP,
was killed in gun shots, reportedly fired by Rajputs. Many others were
injured.



Dalits of India have been facing violence from the Hindu caste society for
thousands of years, which has continued after independence despite the
constitution and protections under special legislations like the prevention
of atrocities act. Perhaps the most  infamous atrocity took place in
Kilvenmani in the southern state of Tamil Nadu in 1968, in which 44 dalit
women and children were killed. More recently, Dalit houses were burnt down
in Gohana and Mirchpur in Haryana.



It is clear that the social domination of landed castes persists in rural
India. Violence against dalits is an important part of this domination. It
becomes particularly virulent when Dalits challenge this domination, as
happened in Shabbirput. It is significant, that while there are
speculations about the nature of Bhim Sena in the media, by the political
class, and state bureaucracy, little is heard about the Rajput
mobilisation. Even if the assembly of 3,000 armed Rajput men on 5 May was
spontaneous, the fact remains that the threat and use of violence by
dominant castes is the normal state of affairs in rural India. Hindutva
mobilisations are building upon this 'normal' state, and by integrating
dominant castes into an anti-minority nationalism, it is providing them
with new avenues to assert their domination. That is how celebrations of
the Rana Pratap's jayanti in the area became a big affair. A cabinet
minister of the state BJP government and two MLAs were present during the 5
May programme at Shimlana village, from where, by many accounts, some of
the attackers came.



The use of violence by dominant castes is not a feudal remnant. It is
closely integrated with the character of state power in India. The inaction
of police on 5 May is not incidental. Even though many Dalits have claimed
attackers used caste abuses, no case has been registered under the
prevention of atrocities act. State has taken no action to confiscate
licensed weapons, which are mainly with Rajputs, to ensure that there is no
further violence. According to a 19 May report in Wire, the district
magistrate and SSP of Saharanpur compared Bhim Sena to Naxals, with little
evidence. The Akhil Bhartiya Kshatriya Mahasabha has demanded that the Bhim
Sena be banned under NSA. Accusing Dalit activists of supporting, or
sympathising with Naxals is not new. In 2011, singer-activists of Kabir
Kala Manch were arrested under similar charges by the Congress-NCP
government in Maharashtra. It has become characteristic of the Indian state
that any opposition to its policies by non-Muslims, whether against
displacement, human rights violations, or caste atrocities, is branded
Naxalite. The favourite tag for Muslims opposing government policies is
Islamic terrorism.



There is a general feeling that this time around Dalits of Saharanpur have
not taken the attack on them lying down. Activism of Bhim Sena is
specifically noted in this regard. It is also claimed that its rise is a
sign of change in the nature of Dalit mobilisations in UP. It is
significant that Ms Mayawati of BSP has termed it as a BJP conspiracy to
weaken her party's influence. The politics in UP is passing through a
critical phase, in which the BJP has successfully shaken earlier political
alignments. This situation requires utmost political wisdom by all
progressive, secular, and anti-BJP forces. The RSS has cultivated
economically and socially weaker castes among Dalits for  many decades by
organising religious functions for their specific caste deities, and
popularising their separate caste histories. This has weakened solidarity
among dalit castes. The same strategy has been successfully applied among
OBCs too. The corruption, opportunism and misdemeanours of Dalit and OBC
politicians have further helped the BJP. All this has opened the way for
the reassertion of the hegemony of the so called upper castes under
Hindutva ideology. The RSS and BJP have manged to get a degree of consent
for their virulent programmes from wide sections of the Hindu caste
society. This is leading UP towards authoritarian use of state power, a
permanent state of anti-minority violence and open attacks on citizenship
rights. The BJP government in UP is also trying to brow beat administration
to toe its line. The official residence of the then SSP in Saharanpur was
attacked by BJP MP and his followers in April, after he had stopped their
procession in a Muslim locality. To save the state from catastrophe it is
essential that anti-BJP forces fashion out a counter hegemony, which unites
all oppressed and working people, and enlightened strata of all castes and
classes.  Assertion of democratic rights, and demands for state policies
against unemployment, agrarian crisis, and for availability of universal
health and education are essential to this counter hegemony.



By all accounts Saharanpur is going to simmer in caste violence for some
time now. As it did during the Muzaffarnagar violence four years ago, the
BJP strategy is to vilify Dalit mobilisation ith full use of its state
power, and consolidate its hold on local dominant and non-dalit castes.
Anti BJP forces need to show principled opposition to its machinations, and
help Dalits gain their civil rights.  Local administration needs to be fair
and assert its constitutional and legal mandate. People's Alliance for
Democracy and Secularism demands that

1. Dalits of Shabbirpur and neighbouring villages are immediately provided
protection and adequate compensation.

2. Where there is evidence, cases should be immediately filed under
appropriate sections of the prevention of atrocities act.

3. The state must assewrt its authority against the threat and use of
violence by dominant castes in the area. All licensed weapons in the area
should be seized.


Battini Rao, Convenor PADS (95339 75195, battini.rao[at]gmail.com

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