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NEW DELHI:
If the recent genome study denying the Aryan-Dravidian
divide has established the antiquity of caste
segregations in marriage, the ongoing session of the UN
Human Rights Council in Geneva looks set to recognize
caste-based discrimination as a human rights violation.
This, despite India’s opposition and following Nepal’s
breaking ranks on the culturally sensitive issue.
Nepal has emerged as the first country from South Asia —
the region where untouchability has been traditionally
practiced — to declare support for the draft principles
and guidelines published by UNHRC four months ago for
“effective elimination of discrimination based on work
and descent” — the UN terminology for caste inequities.
In a side-event to the session on September 16, Nepalese
minister Jeet Bahadur Darjee Gautam said his county
welcomed the idea mooted by the UNHRC document to
involve “regional and international mechanism, the UN
and its organs” to complement national efforts to combat
caste discrimination. This is radically different from
India’s stated aversion to the internationalization of
the caste problem.
Much to India’s embarrassment, Nepal’s statement evoked
an immediate endorsement from the office of the UN high
commissioner for human rights, Navanethem Pillay, a
South African Tamil. Besides calling Nepal’s support “a
significant step by a country grappling with this
entrenched problem itself”, Pillay’s office said it
would “like to encourage other states to follow this
commendable example”.
The reference to India was unmistakable especially since
Pillay had pressed the issue during her visit to New
Delhi in March. Pillay not only asked India to address
“its own challenges nationally, but show leadership in
combating caste-based discrimination globally”. The
granddaughter of an indentured labourer taken to South
Africa from a village near Madurai, Pillay recalled that
in 2006, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had compared
untouchability to apartheid. Adding to India’s
discomfiture, Sweden, in its capacity as the president
of the Europeon Union, said, “caste-based discrimination
and other forms of discrimination based on work and
descent is an important priority for EU”. If this issue
continues to gather momentum, UNHRC may in a future
session adopt the draft principles and guidelines and,
to impart greater legal force, send them for adoption to
the UN General Assembly.
The draft principles specifically cited caste as one of
the grounds on which more than 200 million people in the
world suffer discrimination. “This type of
discrimination is typically associated with the notion
of purity and pollution and practices of untouchability,
and is deeply rooted in societies and cultures where
this discrimination is practiced,” it said.
Though India succeeded in its efforts to keep caste out
of the resolution adopted by the 2001 Durban conference
on racism, the issue has since re-emerged in a different
guise, without getting drawn into the debate over where
caste and race are analogous.
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