http://atrocitynews.wordpress.com/2011/03/25/wikileaks-exposes-caste-virus-in-indian-life/
 
 Wikileaks exposes Caste-Virus in Indian life
 25Mar11
 
 "While the UPA has focused on bettering the lot of the Dalit
 community, it is dominated by upper caste Hindus, very few of whom are
 genuinely concerned about the plight of dalits," the American Embassy
 said in a cable sent under the name of Ambassador David Mulford on
 June 22, 2005 ( 35177: confidential), and accessed by The Hindu
 through WikiLeaks.
 
 'Little upward mobility'
 
 "This ensures that dalits will continue to be an oppressed,
 discriminated group in India. Although the GOI [Government of India]
 has passed legislation and established government bodies to administer
 these laws, it has failed to attack the root of the problem," the
 cable said. "There are success stories, but acts of violence and
 prejudice against dalits, combined with government negligence, persist
 and there is little upward mobility among the dalit population."The
 Embassy wrote that without a broader, more comprehensive approach to
 teaching tolerance and equality early in primary schools, it is
 unlikely that the social acceptance of caste-based discrimination will
 fade any time soon."The increasing dominance of the private sector in
 the economy could also result in greater economic polarization if
 there is no mechanism in place to combat job discrimination."Embassy
 interlocutors reported that after one year of United Progressive
 Alliance (UPA) rule, limited government efforts to improve the
 socio-economic status of dalits have shown little success. "Government
 reservation laws do not extend to the private sector, the largest and
 fastest growing segment of the economy. Most experts believe the key
 to ending discrimination is a comprehensive education campaign
 starting at the primary level to teach acceptance of dalits, a topic
 completely absent from India's public school system."
 
 Failure to organise
 
 "Despite the political success of dalits such as current Minister for
 Chemicals and Fertilizers Ram Vilas Paswan, dalits' failure to
 organize at the national level has limited their ability to demand
 equal rights. Until the Indian majority increases pressure to change
 the status quo, many dalits will remain trapped below the poverty line
 in manual labor jobs with few mechanisms for upward mobility," the
 cable went on.
 (This article is a part of the series "The India Cables" based on the
 US diplomatic cables accessed by The Hindu via Wikileaks.')
 
 Most experts believe the key to ending discrimination is a
 comprehensive education campaign starting at the primary level to
 teach acceptance of dalits, a topic completely absent from India's
 public school system.
 
 35177, 6/22/2005 13:44, 05NEWDELHI4761, Embassy New Delhi,
 CONFIDENTIAL,, "This record is a partial extract of the original
 cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.221344Z
 Jun 05″,"C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 05 NEW DELHI 004761
 
 SIPDIS
 
 E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/06/2015 TAGS: PHUM, PGOV, ECON, ELAB, IN, Human Rights
 
 SUBJECT: SOCIOECONOMIC FUTURE OF INDIAN DALITS REMAINS BLEAK
 
 Classified By: DCM Bob Blake for Reasons 1.4 (B, D)
 
 1. (C) Summary: Embassy interlocutors report that after one year of
 UPA rule, limited government efforts to improve dalit (formerly called
 ""untouchables"") socioeconomic status have shown little success,
 ensuring that they continue to face severe economic and social
 discrimination. Government reservation laws do not extend to the
 private sector, the largest and fastest growing segment of the
 economy. Most experts believe the key to ending discrimination is a
 comprehensive education campaign starting at the primary level to
 teach acceptance of dalits, a topic completely absent from India's
 public school system. Despite the political success of dalits such as
 current Minister for Chemicals and Fertilizers Ram Vilas Paswan,
 dalits' failure to organize at the national level has limited their
 ability to demand equal rights. Until the Indian majority increases
 pressure to change the status quo, many dalits will remain trapped
 below the poverty line in manual labor jobs with few mechanisms for
 upward mobility. End Summary.
 
 Discrimination Remains Despite Legal Protection
 
 ——————————————— –
 
 2. (U) Dalits, who make up approximately 16% of India's population,
 roughly 166 million people, occupy the lowest position in the social
 structure and face constant and severe discrimination. Formerly called
 ""untouchables"" because ""caste Hindus"" believe they can be
 ""polluted"" by having any contact with them, most dalits remain
 trapped at the bottom rung of the caste ladder. In fact, most ""caste
 Hindus"" consider them to be so low as to be outside the caste system
 altogether.
 
 3. (C) Despite the passage of the Anti-Untouchability Act of 1955 and
 the Prevention of Atrocities Act of 1989, crimes against dalits are
 still a major social problem, and discrimination is widespread.
 According to Jawarahal Nehru University Professor and Director of the
 Indian Institute of Dalit Studies SK Thorat, all of the trappings of
 untouchability remain in rural India and rampant job discrimination
 occurs in India's cities and towns. Thorat recently told Poloff that
 the approximately 18,000 caste-related discrimination cases filed
 annually with the Indian government are only a small fraction of the
 actual number. Vastly more cases go unreported, because dalits in
 rural areas still live under feudal systems and cannot risk angering
 their high-caste landlords. Thorat also commented that only the most
 serious and well-publicized acts of caste discrimination receive the
 attention of the Indian authorities.
 
 4. (C) Ram Nath Kovind, himself a dalit and a BJP MP from Uttar
 Pradesh, expressed a more positive view to Poloff recently, stating
 that ""open"" discrimination against dalits has decreased dramatically
 over the last decade, while the number of persons who genuinely care
 about helping dalits has increased. He maintained that while
 discrimination persists in the housing sector, employment decisions
 are usually free from bias. Executive Director of the South Asian
 Human Rights Documentation Center Ravi Nair agreed that employment
 discrimination against dalits has decreased over the last decade,
 while access to housing often remains based on caste.
 
 The Reservation System
 
 ———————-
 
 5. (U) The GOI uses a system of ""reservations,"" similar to
 affirmative action programs in the US, in an attempt to ameliorate the
 social and economic disparities resulting from the caste system. Under
 the system, dalits receive government-mandated, numerical quotas in
 government employment and education programs. The law requires the
 state to allocate approximately 16 percent of government jobs, seats
 in schools, the Parliament and State Assemblies, and public housing be
 to ""scheduled"" castes and tribes. These schedules contain a list of
 underprivileged groups determined by the government to need social
 assistance. There are no reservations for dalits in the military or
 the private sector.
 
 6. (C) Nair argued that the reservation system has only been partially
 successful in empowering dalits, because they often discriminate
 against each other. For example, in North India, a subgroup of dalits
 known as the Jatevs have become very successful in the leather
 industry. Nair indicated that this group of dalits would never help
 other dalit groups in the area, such as the Bhangi, which they
 consider lower. He observed that due to the many strata within each
 caste, the reservation system has created a ""creamy layer"" of
 successful people within the dalit community. In general, these groups
 have focused on solidifying their own positions rather than helping to
 empower other dalits, Nair stated.
 
 7. (C) Professor Thorat judged the reservation system as ""only a
 partial success"" and maintained that its effectiveness will decline
 in the future, because discrimination is rampant in the private
 sector, which is creating the most new jobs. Himself a dalit,
 Professor Thorat claimed that high-caste Hindus would almost always
 hire another caste Hindu over a dalit, even if the dalit were fully
 qualified for the job. He theorized that the religious basis of the
 caste system, which teaches that dalits hold their social position due
 to mistakes made in a prior life, allows caste Hindus to discriminate
 without guilt. BJP MP Kovind disagreed with Thorat, asserting to
 Poloff that current legislation has to a large degree been successful
 in protecting dalit rights, but that India still has work to do to end
 discrimination, citing increasing dalit access to primary education as
 a place to start.
 
 8. (C) Centuries of discrimination have confined most dalits to the
 lowest paying jobs. Thorat claimed that 70% of all dalits live in
 rural areas, and over 90% work in the agricultural sector as unskilled
 or day laborers. Most of the remainder are employed in manual,
 unskilled labor jobs in urban areas. Given these facts, he argued that
 only 5% of the working dalit population has actually benefited from
 the Indian reservation law. He acknowledged that while GOI poverty
 alleviation programs help dalits, the government does not strictly
 monitor them and many are never implemented. Thorat asserted that the
 vast majority of dalits are denied upward socioeconomic mobility due
 to lack of access to education, land, and capital. Kovind commented
 that the true basis of discrimination is economic in nature rather
 than caste-based, as the ""haves discriminate against the have nots""
 and use the caste system to perpetuate differences between economic
 groups. Comparing the caste system to the trade guilds in feudal
 Europe (in that certain groups performed specific jobs), he added that
 under the caste system persons acquire their trade at birth, while the
 guilds allowed job mobility. Caste factors are now used to protect
 jobs and livelihoods more than anything else, Kovind argued.
 
 Poor Prospects for Improvement
 
 ——————————
 
 9. (C) Thorat and Justice Party President and Chairman of the
 All-India Confederation of Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
 Organizations Dr. Udit Raj commented to us recently that despite
 India's growing economy, the outlook for dalits remains bleak.
 According to Thorat, globalization and economic liberalization have
 actually hurt dalit prospects for progress and social mobility. Raj
 argued that liberalization will shift more of the economy from the
 public to the private sector, where hiring managers are almost
 exclusively from high castes and constantly discriminate against
 dalits, denying them the opportunities guaranteed by reservations.
 Unlike the United States, India has no equal opportunity law
 applicable to the private sector, which means that the rapidly
 expanding private sector is under no compulsion to hire dalits, while
 the public sector will have fewer jobs to offer. Kovind predicted that
 caste-based discrimination will exist for at least the next 50-100
 years in India. He suggested that since the Hindu religion condones
 caste, it will take longer for the GOI to end caste discrimination in
 India than it will take to eradicate racial discrimination in the US.
 
 10. (C) Sangh Priya Guatam, a dalit BJP MP from Uttar Pradesh, India's
 largest state and one of its poorest, agreed that dalits will be left
 behind in a globalizing world and that job reservations in the private
 sector would be an important tool to ensure equality. Guatam stated
 that the BJP favors private sector reservations and would like the UPA
 government to take up the issue in Parliament and not rely on the
 private sector to develop a solution. Thorat confirmed that a
 Ministerial Commission is researching the issue of reservations in the
 private sector. Raj did not expect positive results, commenting that
 the private sector fears losing competitiveness, especially in the
 information technology realm, should the GOI extend reservations to
 private industry. Thorat and Raj both denied that private sector
 reservations would hurt productivity, as many qualified dalit
 applicants could fill reserved slots. Kovind stated that the BJP
 favors reservations in the private sector and will pressure the UPA
 government to institute them.
 
 GOI-CII Agreement on Reservations
 
 ———————————
 
 11. (C) Thorat asserted that a June 2 agreement between the
 Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) and the Ministry of Social
 Justice and Empowerment will likely prevent the extension of
 reservations to the private sector. Under the agreement, the GOI will
 not press for government-legislated private sector reservations for
 dalits. In exchange, the CII pledged to promote vocational skill
 advancement programs for dalits in the private sector. Thorat agreed
 that vocational programs are necessary, but will not help dalits as
 much as reservations. Raj concurred, stating that with a rapidly
 growing population and an excess of workers, high-caste hiring
 managers will always choose non-dalits, regardless of qualifications,
 unless the law forces them to do otherwise.
 
 12. (C) Dalits view the GOI-CII agreement as yet another mechanism to
 maintain the status quo, according to Raj. He argued that with the BJP
 and Congress dominated by upper-castes with little interest in
 increasing opportunities for the lower castes, both parties have
 abandoned platforms aimed at empowering the poor and elevating the
 socioeconomic status of dalits, while Congress has exploited its
 secular identity to justify inaction. The high castes want to preserve
 the status quo because they benefit from it. A large segment of the
 population living in desperation guarantees a pool of workers willing
 to work for minuscule salaries and perform the most menial jobs. Raj
 anticipates that the CII,s promise to offer vocational training to
 dalits will never be adequately implemented and is unlikely to
 increase dalit employment opportunities.
 
 Solutions?
 
 ———-
 
 13. (C) Education programs for Indian youth to increase egalitarian
 attitudes are the only way to truly break caste discrimination,
 according to Thorat and Raj, although they asserted that the
 initiative needed to centrally mandate such education in all public
 schools is absent. Raj proffered that the upper-castes have enjoyed
 thousands of years of free access to education, at the expense of
 dalits. These same castes remain in control of India's educational
 institutions and, consequently, few administrators wish to mandate or
 incorporate education programs advocating dalit equality. Thorat and
 Raj contend that the human rights awareness classes currently offered
 in some schools are wholly inadequate, as they do not cover caste
 discrimination or critically investigate the unjust norms regarding
 interpersonal relationships between dalits and the caste Hindus still
 practiced today. Raj pointed out that until such education programs
 are implemented, schools will serve as breeding grounds for prejudice,
 and upper caste children will continue to learn that it is permissible
 to discriminate against dalits. He argued that the present system
 teaches caste Hindus that it is acceptable to cheat dalits and
 discriminate against them.
 
 14. (C) Reservations in public education institutions have not
 translated into enhanced socioeconomic status for dalits, according to
 Thorat. Schools and teachers are unable to keep up with the growing
 numbers of children, and dalits are usually the first children denied
 an education when resources are scarce. Therefore, many dalits have no
 access to the primary education necessary to qualify for
 education-based reservations in the university system. Since public
 schools frequently offer substandard education, and the vernacular
 education they provide is held in low regard, few members of the
 Indian elite and middle class attend them. This leaves private,
 English-medium education as the principal tool for upward mobility. As
 a result, argues Raj, GOI-enforced dalit reservation in public schools
 has not led to increased social mobility, and most dalits with access
 to education remain in manual, unskilled jobs that others refuse to
 take.
 
 15. (C) Raj also questioned whether the GOI was committed to taking
 effective action to end discrimination against dalits, claiming that
 most members of the Indian Commission on Scheduled Castes and
 Scheduled Tribes which investigates violations of anti-caste
 discrimination law are from the upper castes and not genuinely
 interested in the plight of dalits. As a result, the Commission
 overlooks most day-to-day discrimination to concentrate on a few
 highly publicized acts of violence or discrimination, he stated.
 
 Dalit Rights Movements
 
 ———————-
 
 16. (U) Dalits' perception of their plight varies from region to
 region, according to Thorat. He noted that the civil rights agitation
 for dalits began in South India with the ""self-respect movement"" in
 the early 20th century. Consequently, dalits in the South have seen
 more improvements than their counterparts in the North, where the
 movement for equality was much slower and began only after Partition
 in 1947. As a result, Northern dalits generally harbor greater ill
 will towards the upper castes than those in the South, because of the
 higher and more recent levels of discrimination against them.
 
 17. (U) This finds expression in the bitter caste-based politics of
 the North India ""Hindi Belt"" which has spawned such parties as the
 dalit-based Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) of Uttar Pradesh and its fiery
 leader Mayawati, who routinely rails against the excesses of ""caste
 Hindus,"" while pledging to openly discriminate in favor of dalits. In
 South India, the dalit agenda has been largely absorbed by more
 broad-based regional parties such as the AIDMK and DMK in Tamil Nadu,
 or the Communists in Kerala.
 
 18. (U) With dalits estimated to constitute from 16% to 27% of the
 Indian population, the lack of progress for dalits has both political
 and social implications. Their lack of access to jobs in the growing
 private sector, and limited access to land and capital, has led
 increasing numbers of dalits to convert to other religions, such as
 Buddhism, Christianity, and Islam, which have not institutionalized
 caste, in hope of obtaining redress. However, for many, interpersonal
 and economic discrimination has continued despite conversion, as most
 caste Hindus in their local communities continue to regard them as
 dalits despite their change of religion.
 
 19. (U) Thorat argued that political organizations have also proven
 ineffective. After 1947, most dalits pledged allegiance to Congress,
 but many became discouraged by what they viewed as the party's failure
 to live up to its promises in the ensuing decades. With the departure
 of many dalits from Congress, their votes have become fragmented
 between numerous and disparate political organizations, preventing
 them from forming a cohesive lobby capable of pressuring the GOI to
 address their concerns. Congress is trying to convince dalits to
 return to the fold, but with little success, and they remain divided.
 Thorat and Raj argue that massive religious conversions or political
 organization have failed to provide necessary social change. With
 these avenues proving largely ineffective, dalits remain discouraged
 and fatalistic. Kovind, who heads the BJP's dalit cell, disagreed,
 asserting that his party is determined to help dalits and shed the
 image that it is only an ""upper caste party."" He argued that only a
 nationalist party like the BJP will succeed in fighting discrimination
 against dalits, as India cannot become a world power until dalits and
 low-caste persons are brought up to the level of the rest of society.
 
 20. (C) Prominent human rights expert Nair stated that dalits need to
 take their case to the courts if they want to achieve emancipation. He
 argued that laws protecting dalits exist, but that they have not used
 them effectively, and that dalit groups do not use the large donations
 they receive from the government, the donor community and private
 sources effectively. He said that they should mirror the civil rights
 movement in the US and set up legal aid defense groups. These groups
 of lawyers would ensure that dalit cases are heard and judgments
 rendered against those who discriminate. Nair warned that nothing will
 change until people who discriminate go to jail or face stiff
 financial penalties. He did not expect dalits to implement his plan,
 because their leaders are more interested in rhetoric than doing the
 hard work required to mount a meaningful challenge in the courts.
 
 Success Stories
 
 —————
 
 21. (U) Despite widespread discrimination, a number of dalits have
 become successful. The highest profile case is that of K.R. Narayanan,
 who served as President of India from 1997-2002. Ram Vilas Paswan,
 currently holding two Ministerial level positions (Minister for
 Chemicals and Fertilizers and Minister for Steel), is a very
 successful politician from Bihar. BSP president and a three-time
 Member of Parliament from Uttar Pradesh Mayawati is also a well-known
 dalit. However, these persons have all benefited from the reservation
 system and local interlocutors stated it unlikely that they would have
 reached these positions without affirmative action programs. The Dalit
 NGO Dalitawaz lists dalits from a wide range of professions, including
 doctors, lawyers, engineers and civil servants, indicating that,
 despite the odds, it is possible for members of this disenfranchised
 group to do well.
 
 Comment
 
 ——-
 
 22. (C) While the UPA has focused on bettering the lot of the dalit
 community, it is dominated by upper caste Hindus, very few of whom are
 genuinely concerned about the plight of dalits. This ensures that
 dalits will continue to be an oppressed, discriminated group in India.
 Although the GOI has passed legislation and established government
 bodies to administer these laws, it has failed to attack the root of
 the problem. There are success stories, but acts of violence and
 prejudice against dalits, combined with government negligence, persist
 and there is little upward mobility among the dalit population.
 Without a broader, more comprehensive approach to teach tolerance and
 equality early in primary schools, it is unlikely that the social
 acceptance of caste-based discrimination will fade any time soon. The
 increasing dominance of the private sector in the economy could also
 result in greater economic polarization if there is no mechanism in
 place to combat job discrimination.
 
 MULFORD
 
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