Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Welfare crucial to capping Dalit anger

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an smriti.kak@hindustant­imes.com

On April 2, violent protests swept northern India when Dalit protesters took to the streets against the Supreme Court’s order banning automatic arrests under the Scheduled Castes (SC)and Scheduled Tribes (ST) Prevention of Atrocities Act, 1989. Ten people died . This manifestat­ion was the latest crisis the National Democratic Alliance government has had to handle concerning Dalits, who comprise about 16% of the country’s population.

Even as many SC-ST communitie­s and the Opposition blamed the government, the ministry of social justice and empowermen­t filed a review petition in the apex court. The government also hinted at an ordinance to nullify the verdict and proposed a bill to put the Act in the Ninth Schedule of the Constituti­on and thus insulate it from judicial scrutiny.

Starting with the 2016 campus unrest that germinated from the suicide of PhD scholar Rohith Vemula and the flogging of a Dalit family in Gujarat’s Una , the BJP government has been accused of failing to ensure equal rights for the SC and STs. But the government rejects the charge, underlinin­g the benefits the communitie­s received from social schemes such as Ujjawala (free gas cylinders to below-poverty-line women), Mudra loans and even toilet constructi­on under the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan.

The government has also moved to celebrate the legacy of BR Ambedkar, and open a number of institutio­ns and programmes in his name, a move the Opposition has termed as appropriat­ion of the Dalit icon. The government has also underscore­d that it has been trying to get Parliament’s sanction to set up a national commission for the Backwards Classes (NCBC). Though the bill to grant constituti­onal status to the NCBC was passed in the Lok Sabha, it failed to get the necessary support in the Rajya Sabha.

This delay has been leveraged by the Bharatiya Janata Party as a point to prove the Opposition’s obstructio­nist politics. While Prime Minister Narendra Modi, himself an OBC, and his cabinet colleagues have often affirmed their commitment to protecting the rights of the OBCs, during the recently concluded Karnataka assembly polls, party president Amit Shah blamed the Opposition for stalling the passage of the bill.

While political analysts see the Commission’s appointmen­t as a move by the BJP to woo the non-dominant OBCs, the government says the commission’s mandate is to examine the sub-categorisa­tion for a “more equitable distributi­on” of quota benefits.

A BJP functionar­y said the move is in line with the Party’s assurance to bridge the gap between communitie­s. The government is also examining the recommenda­tions of the National Commission for De-Notified, Nomadic and Semi- Nomadic Tribes (DNTs/ NTs/ SNTs), to offer reservatio­n in jobs and education to these communitie­s, and bring them under the ambit of the PoA Act.

Activist and author Anand Teltumbde, however, thinks the condition of SCs and STs has not improved. “It has been calamitous for the lower Dalits. Atrocities galloped, attempts to curb reservatio­ns, persistent decline in budget provisions, intrigues in naming special component plans to welfare schemes, repression of Dalit students etc. are the hallmark of Modi rule,” he said.

NEWDELHI:

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