2001

Home Ministry hampering NHRC work, says Report

26 October 2001
Times News Network THE TIMES OF INDIA
By Akshaya Mukul
New Delhi: After eight years of operation the inherent weaknesses of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) and its originating legislation are becoming increasingly evident, says the South Asia Human Rights Documentation Centre (SAHRDC) and its report “Judgement Reserved: The Case of the NHRC”, Finalized last

Month and submitted to the commission, the report is highly critical of the home ministry for “displaying intransigence…with regard to recommendations submitted by the NHRC.”

2001

U.N. Conference On Racism Opens; Despite Leaders’ Calls For Unity, Mideast Divisions Dominate

1 September 2001
The Washington Post
DURBAN, South Africa, Aug. 31 — Representatives of 166 nations gathered here today to launch an ambitious UN conference on combating racism and discrimination. But divisions over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict threatened to undermine the meeting, and conference organizers pleaded with participants not to let that happen.

Welcoming the delegates, South African President Thabo Mbeki spoke confidently of their common resolve to “ensure that every human being leads a life of dignity,” and that no one should be “despised” or impoverished, denied statehood or turned into a “permanent refugee,” simply “because they are not white.”

2001

En Inde, les “intouchables” ont survécu à un dispositif légal quasi complet

30 August 2001
Le Monde
Françoise Chipaux
LE MONDE | 30.08.01 | 12h50
NEW DELHI de notre correspondante en Asie du Sud “Basé à Delhi, un Dhiman brahmane cherche alliance pour son fils”; “Cherche un Gautam kshatriya au teint clair”; “Union avec un élégant garçon jat”… Toutes les castes, y compris les “intouchables”, qu’on appelle en Inde dalit (défavorisé) et qui sont classés comme “castes répertoriées” (scheduled castes), ont leur colonne dans les annonces matrimoniales du dimanche. La caste reste en Inde l’appartenance première et l’abolition de l’intouchabilité, en 1950, par la première Constitution de l’Inde indépendante, n’a pas changé grand-chose dans les faits.

2001

An Untouchable Subject? Indian Government Wants Caste System off U.N. Agenda

29 August 2001
http://www.npr.org
In India’s crowded cities, where you can’t help but rub up against strangers, it’s possible to be an “untouchable,” and yet go largely unnoticed — and unhated. It’s a different story in the villages, however. There, where the majority of the population still lives, India’s ancient caste system still holds sway. Many villages are strictly segregated by caste, and the untouchables — or Dalits — are often forbidden to drink from upper-caste wells or to worship at their temples.

Gandhi called them the Harijan — or God’s children. More than 50 years ago, India outlawed discriminating against them. Nearly 20 percent of the seats of India’s parliament are reserved for them. Government jobs and places in India’s schools are also reserved for them. Despite all this, discrimination still persists.

2001

India’s Caste System

29 August 2001
National Public Radio
Anchors: Renee Montagne | Reporters: Michael Sullivan
RENEE MONTAGNE, host:

Another potential for the Durban conference is the question of India’s untouchables. In a report released yesterday, the New York-based Human Rights Watch said caste-based discrimination affects 250 million people. It said the World Conference Against Racism should discuss the issue. Untouchables are well represented among the non-governmental groups in Durban, but India’s government is lobbying to keep the issue off the table. Indian officials insist caste and race are not comparable and that caste discrimination is an internal issue. NPR’s Michael Sullivan reports from New Delhi.

2001

Hardline Minister’s Proposal for Kashmir, Punjab Atrocities Spark Outcry From Justice Groups Anger at Pardon Plan for Abuses

21 August 2001
South China Morning Post
By Maseeh Rahman
A suggestion by India’s hardline Home Minister, Lal Krishna Advani, that the Government might soon grant a general amnesty to army and police personnel accused of crimes in Kashmir and other troubled provinces has provoked a backlash from human rights organisations.

“The Government has already hobbled the prosecution of a large number of cases pending before courts in Kashmir, Punjab and the northeast,” Ravi Nair, of the South Asia Human Rights Documentation Centre in New Delhi, said yesterday.

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