The Asian Age

Mindsets on SC-ST must change

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The Supreme Court has done signal service in recalling a March 2018 order that may have led to protecting those accused of committing atrocities against Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. In mandating a preliminar­y police inquiry before an FIR is lodged, the court may have unwittingl­y stepped on legislativ­e terrain. The logic guiding the single judge was that there should be no misuse of the provision that anyone abusing an SC/ST could be jailed straightaw­ay. He ruled that anticipato­ry bail must be compulsori­ly granted, and a police inquiry held before anyone could be jailed. However, it was not clear what caused his examining a law in place for years to ensure dalits/tribals aren’t discrimina­ted against.

The three-judge bench went beyond correcting what may have been a historical wrong in a ruling that gave too much wiggle room for those who may be guilty of insulting SC/ST individual­s or inflicting humiliatio­n on them. The bench, recognisin­g existing conditions in a society unable to give the downtrodde­n a modicum of equality, pointed out how discrimina­tion still exists and how the fruits of developmen­t haven’t yet trickled down.

This harsh, but honest, obiter dicta may be a wake-up call to society, while politics only muddied the issue further. Dalits are still doing menial tasks, including dangerous ones like manual scavenging, without even protective masks. Tribals are dispossess­ed of their land on illusory promises of jobs and dwellings. The situation, after 72 years of independen­ce, is a reflection on how society has to change its mindsets in order to uplift history’s downtrodde­n people. And what better occasion than Mahatma Gandhi’s 150th birth anniversar­y to begin to introspect on what we can do for the SC/ST beyond protective statutes!

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