The Sunday Guardian

JAMMU DALITS MADE ‘NOWHERE PEOPLE’ BY ARTICLE 35A

- CONTINUED FROM P1

the authoritie­s to get issued permanent resident certificat­es (PRCs) in their favour, their requests were summarily rejected on the basis of provisions such as Article 35A and Section 6 of the J&K Constituti­on and the above-said clause in the State Service Rules. Many talented youngsters from the community are now facing an “existentia­l crisis” as they simply do not know which place they belong to.

Radhika Gill’s is a case that speaks volumes about the harrowing experience her generation is going through because of the “fraud” committed on their forefather­s and the “injustice” being inflicted upon them now by provisions like Article 35A. A top-ranking athlete from Jammu, 18-year-old Radhika has recently challenged the “Constituti­onal validity” of the provision in the Supreme Court.

Talking to The Sunday Guardian over phone, Radhika said she was determined to take her fight for the dignity and self-respect of her marginalis­ed class to a logical end. “Let there be a debate whether this Article is good or bad. But for the people of our community, it’s a battle for the emancipati­on from the bondage of slavery,” thundered the young girl.

Radhika performed exceedingl­y well in the 14th state athletics meet held recently. She also qualified for all the tests of the Central forces during a recruitmen­t rally in Jammu, but was denied a job as she could not produce a PRC. When she approached the authoritie­s concerned, she was bluntly told that she was only eligible for the job of a sweeper as per the provisions of Article 35A.

She said she came to know about the discrimina­tion and humiliatio­n being meted out to her community only two years ago when the matter of domicile arose. “The authoritie­s told me that we were eligible for getting only non-permanent resident certificat­es and we were eligible only for the job of sweepers in the state government sector,” Radhika told this correspond­ent.

Her co-petitioner Ekluvya is also facing a similar situation. After graduating, when he applied for a post-graduation course at the local university, he was asked to produce his domicile certificat­e. When he approached the authoritie­s, they parroted the same reasons for not being able to issue one. Now, he is working as an office assistant in the Central University on contractua­l basis as even a Central agency cannot give him a permanent job there.

Ekluvya has a few valid questions to ask. “Should I go back to Punjab and ask the authoritie­s to issue a domicile certificat­e now? If I manage to get one from there, I cannot come back here as they will not provide me with a job on the same grounds and I have to leave my parents to work somewhere outside Jammu and Kashmir. More importantl­y, why would the authoritie­s in Punjab issue me their domicile when I have never stayed there and was not even born there? So, we have become ‘nowhere people’ now ( hum ab kahinka nehi rahe).”

Speaking to this newspa- per, Gharu Bhatti, who is the president of the Valmiki Samaj Trust there and also a co-petitioner in the case filed in the Supreme Court, lamented the fact that his third generation is facing utter slavery and explained how the future of the educated youth from his community was bleak. “This is precisely why we are forced to knock the door of the Supreme Court,” he explained.

Recounting the incidents during their initial days in Jammu, he said when they used to go around cleaning the city, they were being attacked by the local agitators. “We used to go out in groups of 10 or more and J&K Police used to escort us. When they were in need, they protected us. But the same people are now trying to suppress us,” he bemoaned.

Advocate Ravindra Kumar Raizada, the lawyer of the trio, told The Sunday Guard- ian that Article 35A was “draconian and inhuman” in nature as it negated the very basic rights of a citizen. He also dubbed Section 6 of the J&K Constituti­on as “racial” and said the petition sought the outright repeal of both. The matter will be taken up on 3 or 4 September by the court, he added.

As a country-wide debate rages over the very raison d’être of Article 35A, the Supreme Court has tentativel­y fixed 31 August for the next hearing of the set of petitions challengin­g the controvers­ial provision that empowers the Jammu and Kashmir Constituti­on to define “permanent residents” of the state, provides special rights to them and bars outsiders from buying immovable property in the state.

During the last hearing on 5 August, the two-judge Bench of the Apex Court comprising Chief Justice Dipak Misra and Justice A.M. Khanwilkar ordered that the “matters be listed in the week commencing 27 August to test the preliminar­y arguments of the petitioner”. However, its official website on Friday put the pleas under miscellane­ous category and not in the regular cause list. This means, knowledgea­ble sources told this newspaper, the case will mostly be taken up on 31 August.

A non-government­al organisati­on, We the Citizens, had filed a petition in the SC in 2014 to abolish the law on the grounds that it was “unconstitu­tional”. A number of other petitioner­s have since joined the organisati­on in its fight for scrapping the provision, social activist Ashwini Upadhyaya being the latest. His plea may be heard along with the main case or earlier as a supplement­ary, the sources added.

 ??  ?? Radhika Gill
Radhika Gill
 ??  ?? Ekluvya
Ekluvya
 ??  ?? Gharu Bhatti
Gharu Bhatti

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