Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

UK caste row reaches boiling point; Anish Kapoor backs law

- Prasun Sonwalkar prasun.sonwalkar@hindustant­imes.com n

LONDON: The Theresa May government faces a delicate balancing act on the sensitive issue of outlawing caste-based discrimina­tion when a public consultati­on ends on Monday, as rival lobbying from the 1.5 millionstr­ong Indian community reaches a boil with high-profile interventi­ons.

The issue has implicatio­ns for New Delhi, which has opposed clubbing ‘caste’ with ‘race’ in the past. The May government is also loathe to rile the Narendra Modi government at a time when post-Brexit Britain is focusing on enhancing trade with India.

The Indian community is deeply divided on the issue, with influentia­l Hindu, Sikh and Jain lobbies denying that caste-based discrimina­tion exists in Britain. While they say enacting such a law would entrench ideas of caste where none exist, Dalit groups and some individual­s insist it exists, making the law necessary.

Caste-based discrimina­tion is not expressly prohibited under Britain’s equality legislatio­n, but section 9 of the Equality Act, 2010, as amended, requires the government to introduce secondary legislatio­n to make caste an aspect of race, thereby making caste-based discrimina­tion a form of race discrimina­tion.

The latest high-profile interventi­on on the issue is from celebrated Mumbai-born sculptor Anish Kapoor, who told The Sunday Times that the government must enact the law to prevent caste-based discrimina­tion. Kapoor, 63, called it an ‘interestin­g anomaly’ and told the paper: “It is outlawed in India, so why not in Britain? It is discrimina­tion at the most vile level. The government introduced laws against slavery, so why can they not act on this?”

“My parents are cosmopolit­an and modern and paid no heed to this. But the truth is that there are parts of India where a lowercaste person is not allowed to enter a street or is not allowed to go into a shop. If they go into a shop, things are put on the floor for them”. “We love to think of Britain as progressiv­e. It will be disgracefu­l if the government bows to pressure and does not act on this key area of human rights,” he added. The Conservati­ve government is seen to be close to the Hindu-Sikh-Jain groups, while Labour and Liberal Democrats are on the prolaw side. Conservati­ve MP from Harrow East Bob Blackman calls the legislatio­n “ill thought-out, divisive and unnecessar­y”.

Prime Minister May told Hindustan Times before the June 8 election: “I recognise the sensitivit­y on the caste issue; there is a consultati­on taking place. There was wording put into the relevant legislatio­n in the House of Lords by Labour and Liberal Democrats working together on that, but I realise how sensitive this issue is.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India