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'Caste, race same in India'
By Our Special Correspondent
HYDERABAD, JUNE 4. The Government of India's stand on caste came
in for criticism by a large number of Dalit and voluntary
organisations in the context of the U.N.-sponsored Durban world
conference against racial discrimination. They expressed their
views at the public hearing held here on Monday by the National
Preparatory Committee of the conference headed by Mr. Justice
Jagannatha Mishra.
In their petitions, the SC, ST and BC organisations insisted that
caste and race were ``one and the same'' in India, citing bonded
labour and practice of untouchability as the manifestations of
caste discrimination.
The venue, Jubilee Hall, had banners and placards filled with
anti-Government slogans. The Union Minister of State for External
Affairs, Mr U. V. Krishnam Raju, had the inaugural function
advanced by two hours and left the place soon after making a
speech which, according to leaders of these organisations, was to
avoid any possible gherao.
However, the day-long hearing by the panel, which consisted of 10
others, including Mr. Dileep Singh Bhuria, Mr. Justice B. L.
Yadav and Mr. Justice Mohd Shamin, chairmen of National
Commissions on SCs and STs, BCs and Minorities respectively, went
on peacefully with each of the 75 petitioners given time to
speak.
Prominent among them were Swamy Agnivesh who pleaded that he be
sent to the Durban meeting as an official Indian delegate in
place of the Minister who ``never knew what the problem of
discrimination was'', Mr. John Dayal, Secretary- General of All-
India Christian Council, who argued that ``caste is worse than
racism'', Prof K. Ilaiah of Osmania University, the author of the
book Why I am Not a Hindu and Mr. Paturu Ramaiah of CPI-(M), who
heads the Committee for Struggle Against Caste Discrimination.
Leaders of non-Governmental and SC/ST/BC organisations who were
invited to the hearing, from Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka, Orissa,
Uttar Pradesh, Assam, Tamil Nadu, and Bihar submitted to the
Commission that the Durban meeting was the ``best chance'' to
ventilate their grievances. They said the Government of India
should ask for the inclusion of caste in the draft agenda of the
meeting.
Mr. John Dayal and Prof. Ilaiah who spoke to the press later,
described the present dispensation at the Centre as ``right
reactionary''. The Minister of State for External Affairs
Minister, in his speech earlier, said caste was not within the
ambit of race as was being understood.
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