Archive for 2014-01-05

காஞ்சி, பழவேரி சேரிப்பெண் விசாலாட்சி சாதிவெறியர்களால் படுகொலை.


31-12-2013, காஞ்சிவரம் மாவட்டம், சாலவாக்கம் ஒன்றியம் - பழவேரி கிராமம் புதிரை வண்ணார் சமூகத்தைச் சார்ந்த சேரிப் பெண் விசாலாட்சி சாதிவெறிப் பிடித்த வன்னிய கும்பலின் கூட்டு சதியால் படுகொலை.

காஞ்சிவரம் மாவட்டம், சாலவாக்கம் ஒன்றியம் - பழவேரி கிராமம் புதிரை வண்ணார் சமூகத்தைச் சார்ந்த சேரிப் பெண் விசாலாட்சி வயது 17 அரும்புலியூர் கிராமத்தைச் சார்ந்த சாதிவெறிப் பிடித்த வன்னிய கார்த்திக் என்பவன் காதலித்து வயிற்றில் 8 மாத கருவை கொடுத்து ஊர்ப் பஞ்சாயத்தில் போலியாக தாலியைக் கட்டி மனைவியான போதும் அவர் வீட்டிற்கு அழைத்து சென்று குடும்பம் நடத்தாமல் விசாலாட்சியின் வீட்டிலேயே வைத்து அவரைத் தொடர்ந்து அடித்து கொடுமை செய்துள்ளான். ஊரார் கேட்டதற்கு வரதட்சனைப் பணம் வேண்டும், சாமான்கள் வேண்டும் என்றும் பேசியுள்ளான். ஊராரும் ஒன்றுகூடி நாங்கள் ஏற்பாடு செய்கிறோம் தயவு செய்து விசாலாட்சியை அடித்து துன்புறுத்தாதீர்கள் என்று பலமுறை மன்றாடியுள்ளனர்.

தொடர்ச்சியான இந்தக் கொடுமைகளின் உச்சம், வன்னிய சாதிவெறியர்களின் கூட்டு சாதியோடு சேரிப் பெண் விசாலாட்சி வயிற்றில் வன்னிய கரு இருக்கக் கூடாது வண்ணார் சமூகத்துப் பெண் நமது தெருவில் வாழக் கூடாது என்று சாதிவெறியர்கள் ஒன்று கூடி கூட்டு சதி செய்து கடந்த 28-12-2013 நள்ளிரவில் விசாலாட்சியை அடித்து படுகொலை செய்து கிணற்றில் வீசி தற்கொலை நாடகம் ஆடி சாதிவெறியாட்டம் நடத்தியுள்ளனர்.

தகவல் அறிந்த விடுதலைச்சிறுத்தைகள் கட்சியினர் காஞ்சி மாவட்ட செயலாளர் சூ.க.விடுதலைச்செழியன் அவர்களுக்கு தொடர்பு கொண்டு செய்தி சொல்ல, 

இன்று 31-12-2013 காலை 9 மணிக்கு மாவட்ட செயலாளர் சூ.க.விடுதலைச்செழியன் அவர்கள் தலைமையிலான விடுதலைச்சிறுத்தைகள் செங்கல்பட்டு அரசு மருத்துவமனையில் திரண்டு RDO, DSP ஆகியோரை முற்றுகையிட்டு சாதிவெறியர்கள் மீது கொலைவழக்காக பதிவு செய்ய வேண்டும் - கூட்டு சதியில் ஈடுபட்ட சாதிவெறி கும்பலை கைது செய்ய வேண்டும் - சகோதரியின் சடலத்தைப் பிரேத பரிசோதனைக்கு உட்படுத்த வேண்டும் - பிறகே சடலத்தை வாங்குவோம் போன்ற கோரிக்கைகளை முன்வைத்து 

வன்கொடுமைத் தடுப்பு சட்டம் - சிறுபெண் கற்பழிப்பு - பெண்கள் வன்கொடுமை சட்டம் - வரதட்சனை கொடுமை உள்ளிட்ட சட்டப் பிரிவுகளின் கீழ் வழக்கைப் பதிவு செய்ய வேண்டும் என சிறுத்தைகள் கண்டன முழக்கங்களை எழுப்பி சேரிப் பெண் விசாலாட்சி சடலத்தை வாங்க மறுத்து முற்றுகை போராட்டம் நடத்தினர்.

சிறுத்தைகளின் உறுதியான நிலைப்பாட்டினால் மருத்துவர்கள் உடனடியாக வரவழைக்கப்பட்டு சகோதரியின் சடலம் பிரேத பரிசோதனைக்கு உட்படுத்தப்பட்டது. பிரேத பரிசோதனையில் இது தற்கொலை அல்ல. கொலை என்று உறுதி செய்தனர் மருத்துவர்கள்.

மாவட்ட செயலாளர் சூ.க.விடுதலைச்செழியன் அவர்கள் போராட்டத்தை வேகமாக முன்னெடுக்க, அருகில் உள்ள அனைத்து சிறுத்தை தோழர்களும் செங்கை மருத்துவமனையில் கூடினர். போராட்டத்தின் வீரியம் அதிகரித்திருந்தது.

போராட்டக்காரர்களிடம் வந்த காவல்துறையினர் கார்த்தியை கைது செய்து விட்டோம். வழக்கையும் வன்கொடுமை தடுப்பு சட்டத்தின் கீழ் பதிவு செய்கிறோம் என்று உறுதியளித்தனர். 

அதன் பின்னரே சடலம் வாங்கப்பட்டு விசாலாட்சியின் சொந்த ஊரான பழவேரி கிராமத்திற்கு எடுத்து செல்லப்பட்டு சிறுத்தைகளின் வீரவணக்க முழக்கங்களுடன் சிறுத்தைகள் படை சூழ விசாலாட்சியின் பிணத்தை சுடுகாடு வரை கொண்டுசென்று இன்று மாலை 6 மணிக்கு அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டது.

சுடுகாட்டில் சேரி மக்களிடம் பேசிய மாவட்ட செயலாளர் சூ.க.விடுதலைச்செழியன் அவர்கள் போராட்டத்திற்கான அடுத்த வடிவங்கள் குறித்தும் அதற்கான பழவேரி சேரி மக்கள் ஒத்துழைப்பும் வேண்டுமென்று பேசினார். 

வருகின்ற 09-01-2014 அன்று வாலாசாபாத் நகரில் ஒரு மாபெரும் கூட்டு ஆர்ப்பாட்டம் நடைபெறும் என்று சுடுகாட்டிலேயே முடிவு எடுக்கப்பட்டது.

உடன் களப்பணியில் வழக்கறிஞர் தேவ அருள்பிரகாசம், பாசறை செல்வராசு, பாக்கம் பேரறிவாளன், மு.ச.ரஞ்சன், தி.வ.எழிலரசு, தென்னவன், செங்கை அன்புச்செல்வன், விச்சுர் செந்தமிழன், ஊடக மையம் ஆதவன், வாலாசபாத் அசோக்குமார் ஆகியோர்.

தலைநிமிரச் சேரி திரளும் - அன்று 
தலைகீழாய் நாடு புரளும்!

சேரிபுயல் ஒருநாள் வரம்பு மீறும் - வரலாறு மாறும்!
ஒப்பாரி ஓலங்கள் சேரிக்கும் மட்டும் சொந்தமல்ல.!
- அண்ணன் திருமாவளவன்.
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ஊடக மையம் - காஞ்சிவரம் மாவட்டம்
விடுதலைச்சிறுத்தைகள் கட்சி.

Ambedkar’s foresight

India’s present political plight is because the political class, lawyers and judges ignore the British Constitutional ethos on which Ambedkar modelled the Constitution. Three books that help us understand that ethos. By A.G. NOORANI

“IT would suit the conditions of this country better to adopt the parliamentary system of Constitution, the British type of Constitution with which we are familiar,” Vallabhbhai Patel said in the Constituent Assembly of India on July 15, 1947 (Constituent Assembly Debates (CAD); Volume 4, page 578). He was reporting on the conclusion arrived on June 7, 1947, at a joint meeting of the Provincial Constitution Committee, of which he was Chairman, and the Union Constitution Committee presided over by Jawaharlal Nehru.
A barrister himself, Patel overrode Gandhi’s objections and got Dr B.R. Ambedkar elected to the Constituent Assembly. This barrister of Gray’s Inn was steeped not only in British Constitutional Law and History, but, unlike other constitutional lawyers, was learned in Political Science as well. He was named Chairman of the Assembly’s Drafting Committee, in which capacity he constantly cited British precedents while explaining the provisions of the draft Constitution.
We have moved a long way since Prof. Myron Weiner wrote an essay on “India’s Two Political Cultures” in mid-1962. In his classification, “the first can be characterised as an emerging mass political culture and the second as an elite political culture” (Political Change in South Asia; Firma K.L. Mukhopadhyay, Calcutta, p. 114). Even 50 years ago, this was a bit of an oversimplification. Now, the two cultures have merged in essentials, while retaining differences in appearances.
The Centre has faithfully copied the States on defections, unprincipled coalitions, misbehaviour in the legislature, securing political support through bribery, coarse rhetoric and much else. Ambedkar’s devotees laud him for his contribution to the uplift of the downtrodden Dalits, the “untouchables” of his time. They are not alone in ignoring his profound insights into constitutionalism and constitutional values. Does Mayawati care for them? Why pick on her alone, when you have the likes of Mulayam Singh Yadav, who praised a person accused of a crime like murder because he had voted for him; the three Lals of Haryana—Bansi, Bhajan and Devi—Mamata Banerjee of West Bengal, and Lalu Prasad and his predecessors in Bihar? What about the regimes of defectors (Charan Singh and Chandra Shekhar), that of the prince of corruption and political dishonesty, P.V. Narasimha Rao, and the ramshackle coalitions of H.D. Deve Gowda, Inder Kumar Gujral, Atal Bihari Vajpayee and Manmohan Singh?

For the most part, our Presidents have been a pathetic lot. Rajendra Prasad and S. Radhakrishnan were ambitious usurpers of power whose games failed, as did those of Zail Singh. Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed was servile, N. Sanjiva Reddy was an intriguer, Pratibha Patil cut a sorry figure, A.P.J. Abdul Kalam was no stranger to intrigue. He was so ignorant of the Constitution as to ask Vajpayee to resign during the 2004 general election. He twice created crises, quite wantonly, which Manmohan Singh defused.
Ambedkar had foreseen these dangers. His comments in the Constituent Assembly on constitutional morality deserve quotation in extenso. On November 4, 1948, he quoted Grote, the historian of Greece, who held that “The diffusion of constitutional morality, not merely among the majority of any community but throughout the whole, is the indispensable condition of government at once free and peaceable; since even any powerful and obstinate minority may render the working of a free institution impracticable, without being strong enough to conquer ascendancy for themselves.” By constitutional morality Grote meant “a paramount reverence for the forms of the Constitution, enforcing obedience to authority acting under and within these forms yet combined with the habit of open speech, of action subject only to definite legal control, and unrestrained censure of those very authorities as to all their public acts combined too with a perfect confidence in the bosom of every citizen amidst the bitterness of party contest that the forms of the Constitution will not be less sacred in the eye of his opponents than in his own”.
Ambedkar remarked: “While everybody recognises the necessity of the diffusion of constitutional morality for the peaceful working of a democratic Constitution, there are two things interconnected with it which are not, unfortunately, generally recognised. One is that the form of administration has a close connection with the form of the Constitution. The form of the administration must be appropriate to and in the same sense as the form of the Constitution. The other is that it is perfectly possible to pervert the Constitution, without changing its form by merely changing the form of the administration and to make it inconsistent and opposed to the spirit of the
Constitution. It follows that it is only where people are saturated with constitutional morality such as the one described by Grote the historian that one can take the risk of omitting from the Constitution details of admission and leaving it for the legislature to prescribe them. The question is, can we presume such a diffusion of constitutional morality? Constitutional morality is not a natural sentiment. It has to be cultivated. We must realise that our people have yet to learn it. Democracy in India is only a top-dressing on an Indian soil, which is essentially undemocratic.

“In these circumstances it is wiser not to trust the legislature to prescribe forms of administration. This is the justification for incorporating them in the Constitution. Another criticism against the draft Constitution is that no part of it represents the ancient polity of India. It is said that the new Constitution should have been drafted on the ancient Hindu model of a state and that instead of incorporating Western theories the new Constitution should have been raised and built upon village panchayats and district panchayats.” He had no difficulty in refuting this (CAD; Vol. 7, p. 38). He concluded by saying “If things go wrong under the new Constitution, the reason will not be that we had a bad Constitution. What we will have to say is that Man was vile” (ibid., p.44; emphasis added throughout).
On November 25, 1949, while replying to the debate, as the Assembly was about to conclude its labours, Ambedkar warned: “However good a Constitution may be, it is sure to turn out bad because those who are called to work it happen to be a bad lot. However bad a Constitution may be, it may turn out to be good because of those who are called to work it happen to be a good lot. The working of a Constitution does not depend wholly upon the nature of the Constitution. The Constitution can provide only the organs of the state such as the legislature, the executive and the judiciary. The factors on which the working of these organs of the state depend are the people and the political parties they will set as their instruments to carry out their wishes and their politics. Who can say how the people of India and their parties will behave?” He added that it was “futile to pass any judgment upon the Constitution without reference to the part which the people and their parties are likely to play” (CAD; Vol. xi; p. 975).
There was, he pointed out on October 14, 1949, something else besides; as fundamental as the letter of the Constitution. “Every Constitution, so far as it relates to what we call parliament democracy, requires three different organs of the state, the executive, the judiciary and the legislature. I have not anywhere found in any Constitution a provision saying that the executive shall obey the legislature, nor have I found anywhere in any Constitution a provision that the executive shall obey the judiciary. Nowhere is such a provision to be found. That is because it is generally understood that the provisions of the Constitution are binding upon the different organs of the state. Consequently, it is to be presumed that those who work the Constitution, those who compose the legislature and those who compose the executive and the judiciary know their function, their limitations and their duties. It is therefore to be expected that if the executive is honest in working the Constitution, then the executive is bound to obey the legislature without any kind of compulsory obligation laid down in the Constitution.
“Similarly, if the executive is honest in working the Constitution, it must act in accordance with the judicial decisions given by the Supreme Court. Therefore my submission is that this is a matter of one organ of the state acting within its own limitations and obeying the supremacy of the other organs of the state. Insofar as the Constitution gives a supremacy to that is a matter of constitutional obligation which is implicit in the Constitution itself.

“No constitutional government can function in any country unless any particular constitutional authority remembers the fact that its authority is limited by the Constitution and that if there is any authority created by the Constitution which has to decide between that particular authority shall be binding upon any other organ. That is the sanction which this Constitution gives in order to see that the President shall follow the advice of his Ministers, that the executive authority is the law made by Parliament and that the executive shall not give its own interpretation of the law which is in conflict with the interpretation of the judicial organ created by the Constitution” (CAD; Vol. 10, p.269).
Ignoring British constitutional ethos
It is those “tacit assumptions” and conventions which make for the smooth functioning of a Constitution. In our case, it was the conventions of the British Constitution; and our present plight is due to the fact that Indian political class, lawyers, judges and academics wilfully ignore that British constitutional ethos in which the system works. Every time a problem arises, people behave as if there was no precedent to consult. Two Presidents, R. Venkataraman and Shankar Dayal Sharma, behaved as if their ipse dixitconstituted law as, indeed, do lawyers and other “experts” who perform on TV channels. Judges are no better.
Once at a seminar, a former bureaucrat who managed to rise to be a “Constitutional expert” asked why we needed to consult British texts at all. There is a rich lore of constitutional tradition in Britain, Canada and Australia, including their provinces, which one can consult with profit. They cover very many, indeed, most situations.
These three works of outstanding merit help to provide a corrective to any who care to learn. “Civil Procedure and Criminal Procedure Code Lawyers” know far less than they suspect even if they laboriously consult the texts. These three works show that much more needs to be learnt; the ambience in which constitutional values command respect, particularly. It is as old as the Greeks. Pericles’ remarks in the famous funeral oration on constitutional conventions are as relevant today as they were in his time.
Prof. Vernon Bogdanor is the foremost authority on the British Constitution. Prime Minister David Cameron was among his more distinguished pupils. The 11 essays collected in this festschrift prove the truth of Prof. Kevin Theads in his remark that “the new constitutional politics has spawned a new constitutional scholarship”. Bogdanor is the last in the line from Dicey, Anson, Bagenot, A.B. Keith (also a Sanskrit scholar) and Ivor Jennings. But he also broke new ground in his works.

Britain devolved power on Scotland and Wales, enacted the Human Rights Act, 1998, and formulated new norms for coalitions for the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats to share power. It established in 2005 a Supreme Court to replace the House of Lords as the court of last resort by enacting the Constitutional Reform Act. Cabinet Secretaries produced manuals to guide Ministers on ethics and on hung Parliaments. The procedure for appointment of judges has been changed radically, as the editor notes in his essay: “The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 arguably goes beyond what is known from other established Constitutions. Comparative experts have pointed out that ‘in virtually all common law systems, elected politicians determine which justices get to serve on the courts.’ Outside the common law traditions, the same is true in Germany, where the Bundestag appoints half of the members of the Constitutional Court and the Bundesrat (the Second Chamber) selects the other half. In France, one third of the members of theConseil Constitutionnel are selected by the President, another third by the Senate and the last third is appointed by the Assemblee Nationale. In Britain, the elected politicians now have practically no role. Sections 26 to 31 of the 2005 Act set out the rules for the appointment of future members of the courts. A selection commission, consisting of the President and Deputy President of the Supreme Court, proposes a name to the Lord Chancellor, who can reject that name only once. In practice the appointment of judges has been removed from the political sphere.’’
Protecting citizens’ rights
One point deserves emphasis. In recent decades, the House of Lords and, later its successor, the Supreme Court, have been vastly more protective of citizens’ rights under legislation on security than the judges of the Supreme Court of India care to.
“In the United Kingdom the courts cannot, as we have seen, strike down Acts of Parliament; they merely can make declarations of incompatibility. What is remarkable is not only that the courts have used this power, but also that Parliament has felt bound to alter legislation that the courts have deemed to be in contravention of the Human Rights Act.
“In A and others v Secretary of State for the Home Department—also known as the ‘Belmarsh case’—the House of Lords declared that Section 23 of the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001 (on indefinite detention of foreign nationals) was incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights. As a consequence, the House of Lords made a declaration of incompatibility under Section 4 of the Human Rights Act 1998. Parliament followed suit and enacted the Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005. In other words, and contrary to what we might expect according to the spatial models developed by Ferejohn, Rosenbluth and Shipan, Parliament moved its preferences closer to that of the courts, not the other way round.”
The other two volumes belong to the series Hart Studies in Constitutional Law. Their relevance to the Indian situation is even more direct.

Parliament and the Law discusses with a wealth of detail, in copious citations of legislation and cases, topics such as parliamentary privilege, touching as they do freedom of speech and criminal law; Parliament and the courts, and parliamentary accountability for the administration of justice. Of particular interest are the two Joint Committees of Parliament on Human Rights and on the Constitution. There is a thorough analysis of recent moves for codification of the privileges which were foiled because of “the decline in the public standing of Parliament in the wake of the expenses scandal”. The writer of this essay, Liam Lawrence Smyth, is the Clerk of the Journals in the House of Commons and Common Clerk of the Joint Committee on Parliamentary Privilege. His remark should be taken to heart by our MPs and MLAs: “A proper appreciation of the role of parliamentary privilege, not to confer special status or immunity upon MPs, but rather to protect the vital engine of democracy, could contribute to restoring the reputation of the political process.” Abuse of parliamentary privilege to assert exemption from the law of the land serves only to undermine the public’s respect for the legislature, for politicians and for politics itself.
The essays compiled by David Feldman in Law in Politics, Politics in Law touch on lawyer-politicians; the impact of legal change on politics, history of legislation on Parliament since 1911, and recent developments, such as the development of the laws on human rights, and “International Law and Great Power Politics” by a Geneva-based international lawyer, Mathew Parish. He opines: “At its worst, international law may lead to an intellectual hypocrisy; a belief that legal adjudication can solve perennial political problems of war and confrontation. Of this it is incapable; and should we hold too dear to the hypothesis that it can, we are in danger of overlooking the more effective weapons available in the armoury of the international community’s foreign policy to shape outcomes. Above all, international law must not become an excuse for failures of military intervention or diplomacy.
The International Criminal Tribunals for Yugoslavia and Rwanda were created amidst international community’s guilt for failure to save lives amidst atrocities. Those courts did not themselves save any lives, and we must not cling to the illusion that they heralded in some new international order that might do so. Finally, to think of international law by too strict an analogy with the high standards we in the West ascribe to domestic law, we may prove ourselves of guilty of falling into a fallacy of definition. The strengths of a robust system of domestic law cannot automatically be ascribed to the system of international law, and it remains far from clear that those strengths can ever become features of the global legal order.”

Nearer home is Ross Cranston’s warning that “Constitutional courts have power to thwart democratically elected governments. Consequently, they have had to grapple with the issue of how the exercise of that power is to be exercised (sic) explained and justified both to the politicians and the public. Historically, the Constitution of the United Kingdom has not conferred on the courts a comparable power. The growth of judicial review from the 1960s led to some discussion about the appropriate role for the courts in upsetting the plans of executive government. In his Hamlyn Lectures in 1990, Lord Woolf acknowledged the dangers which could result from an over-invasive use of judicial review, the need to strike a balance and the safeguards against abuse such as the flexible nature of the remedies. There has been a great deal of writing since about judicial deference to legislative and executive power.”



It is an acute, but not insoluble dilemma—how to reconcile democratic governance by elected leaders with judicial review by unelected judges—provided that the judges themselves are erudite in constitutional law, are men of dignity and reserve who shun popularism and popular applause and are truly honest and faithful to their oaths of office. This animal is not too conspicuous in our zoos.
Source :: The Frontline

Dalit Literature Should Retain Its Identity: Siddalingaiah

After inaugurating a session on Dalit literature at the 80th Kannada Sahitya Sammelana here on Wednesday, Siddalingaiah said this movement and agitation will have serious implications if the upper castes support Dalits. Clarifying that the Dalit agitations are not against any particular caste, he said it is in support of the poor from all communities.
The rest of the society should understand and feel the pulse of Dalits’ agony, he added. In a survey conducted by a media house, 19 lakh people voted for Ambedkar choosing him as an important person over the likes of Indira Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru. “This shows Indian society has started accepting Ambedkar as a leader. One should know that all those who voted in favour of Ambedkar are not Dalits,” he added. Siddalinagaiah said it is high time that awareness is created among non-Dalits about the plight of innocent Dalits and weaker sections. Referring to a suggestion made by Dandappa, an officer about merging Dalit literature with Kannada literature, Siddalingaiah, who is a noted Dalit poet, said Dalit literature is a sad part of Kannda literature and it should retain its distinct identity.
Writers Prashantha Nayak and Mudanakudda Chinnaswamy supported his stand and felt that agitation should be the tool to fight for constitutional rights. ‘Let a Dalit Preside Over Next Meet’ Chinnaswamy said a Dalit writer should preside over the next kannada meet. This opportunity should also be given to women, including Dalit women writers, he added. He said that the Sahitya Sammelana did not spare much time to discuss the plight of the Dalits and their literature. The atrocities against Dalits have not yet stopped. People of the country rose against the Delhi gang-rape incident. But people have not shown the same zeal and commitment about rape incidents on Dalit women, he regretted.
“It is unfortunate that Dalit families which lodge complaints against rape are socially boycotted,” he said. He said that the Dalits should preserve their inherent cultural values and know the conspiracy of continuing heinous practices like Made Snana and Bettale Seve.

Source :: The New Indian Express(Karnataka)

Statue Row

Two buses were damaged and three persons, including a Sub-Inspector of police, were injured during road blockade staged by the Viduthalai Chiruthaigal Katchi (VCK) to protest the vandalisation of the Ambedkar statue at Abhishegapakkam.Over 1,350 VCK activists, including the party’s State convenor S Paavaanan, were arrested during the protests held at 21 places in Puducherry.
SPolice (South) S Bairavasamy said the windshields of a private bus and a van were damaged by the protesters at Karikalampakkam. Sub-inspector Rajamanohar, who tried to stop the protestors, was injured. Another bus was damaged at Poraiyur-Ousteri junction. Meanwhile, tension prevailed in Karikalampakkam after a section of the local people objected to the road blockade. Police had to resort to lathicharge to disperse the crowd, which regrouped in a colony and blocked the road.
Paavaanan, who courted arrest at the Venkata Subba Reddiar Statue Junction, said the agitation was also to protest the removal of statues from Pathukannu and Thiruvandarkoil by the Revenue and Police officials. He said police inaction would only encourage the culprits involved in the desecration of Ambedkar statues.
In Karaikal, as many as 100 VCK activists were detained by the police. During the protest on Bharathiar Road near Karaikal bus stand, the VCK cadre demanded installation of a CCTV camera near all Ambedkar statues.
Source :: The New Indian Express
On Thursday, the VCK activists along with State leader S Pavaanan, staged a road blockade on the Abhishegapakkam-Madukkarai stretch blocking the traffic for more than three hours. Police led by SP (rural) Deivasigamoni held talks with the agitators, who were unrelenting.
Paavaanan told the SP that Ambedkar statues were damaged on two occasions in recent days and yet the culprits involved were not booked. The police inaction encouraged the anti-social elements to continue with the act of creating division in society by destructing the statue, he charged.
Source :: The New Indian Express

Traffic Hit Due to VCK Protest

Police personnel’s  presence was stepped up in the village to prevent untoward incidents.
Over 100 residents of Thattacherry colony, including 20 women and party functionaries of VCK squatted on the Arni-Cheyyar road at Thattacherry junction for nearly three hours from 8 am. The protestors demanded that police take immediate action and arrest the miscreants who damaged the statue of Ambedkar.
Sources said that the right arm of the cement statue, which was installed in 1998, was found damaged around 8 am on Friday. Sources said the statue must have been damaged during the intervening night of Thursday and Friday.
Angry residents of the colony gathered on the main road and staged a protest, creating tension. They alleged that the caste Hindus from neighbouring Irukur village were behind the mischief. On information, the functionaries of the VCK from the neighbouring villages gathered and blocked the road.
Meanwhile, deputy superintendent of police of Ranipet Baskaran and the Arcot tahsildar rushed to the spot to pacify the agitators. The protesters withdrew the protest around 11 am after police officials assured them of prompt action.
A complaint was lodged with the police. Police registered a case and launched an investigation. “The statue was installed in 1998 amidst a lot of problems between Dalits and caste Hindus. The problem seems to have resurfaced,” said a police officer. He added that five police personnel were deployed in the village to avert untoward incidents.
Source :: The New Indian Express

விவசாயி மீது பாய்ந்த “தலித்” வன்கொடுமை தடைச்சட்டம்

நாமக்கல் மாவட்டம், மோகனூர் அருகே உள்ள மாமரத்துப்பட்டியைச் சேர்ந்தவர் பழனியப்பன் (வயது-60). தன்னுடைய நிலத்தில் விவசாயம் செய்துவரும் இவர் ஆங்கிலப் புத்தாண்டு நாளான புதன்கிழமை அதிகாலை 5 மணியளவில் தன்னுடைய வீட்டிலிருந்து சைக்கிளில் தோட்டத்துக்கு சென்றார்.
அப்போது, அந்த பகுதியை சேர்ந்த மூன்று இளைஞர்கள் புத்தாண்டை வரவேற்று சாலையில் வாசகங்கள் எழுதிக் கொண்டிருந்தனராம். இதில் ஒரு இளைஞர் மீது பழனியப்பன் சைக்கிள் மோதி விட்டதாகத் தெரிகிறது.
இந்தச் சம்பவம் தொடர்பாக இரு தரப்பினருக்கும் வாக்குவாதம் ஏற்பட்டது. அப்போது பழனியப்பன் தனது கையில் வைத்திருந்த மண்வெட்டியால் அந்தப் பகுதியைச் சேர்ந்த பிரபாகரன் (வயது-23) என்ற இளைஞரின் தலையில் அடித்ததுடன், அங்கிருந்த மூன்று இளைஞர்களின் “சாதி” பெயரைச் சொல்லியும் திட்டினாராம்.
இதில், காயமடைந்த பிரபாகரன் நாமக்கல் அரசு மருத்துவமனையில் சிகிச்சைக்கு அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டார். இதைத்தொடர்ந்து, இந்தச் சம்பவம் குறித்து பிரபாகரன் மோகனூர் காவல் நிலையத்தில் புகார் அளித்தார்.
அதன் பேரில், பழனியப்பன் மீது வன்கொடுமை தடுப்புச் சட்டத்தின் கீழ் போலீஸார் வெள்ளிக்கிழமை வழக்குப் பதிவு செய்தனர். இதற்கு எதிர்ப்புத் தெரிவித்து, கொங்குநாடு மக்கள் தேசிய கட்சி, கொங்குநாடு முன்னேற்றக் கழகம், பா.ம.க ஆகிய கட்சியினர் நூற்றுக்கணக்கானோர் மோகனூர் காவல் நிலையத்தை திங்கள்கிழமை முற்றுகையிட்டன்ர.
தொடர்ந்து,  முறையான விசாரணையின்றி யார்மீதும், போலீசார் வன்கொடுமைத் தடுப்புச் சட்டத்தில் வழக்குப் பதிவு செய்யக் கூடாது என்றும், விவசாயி பழனியப்பன் மீது பி.சி.ஆர் சட்டத்தில் பதிவு செய்யப்பட்டுள்ள வழக்கை உடனடியாக வாபஸ் பெற வேண்டும் என்றும் கோரி முழக்கமிட்டனர்.

இதையடுத்து, அங்கு வந்த காவல் துணைக் கண்காணிப்பாளர் ராஜேந்திரன், போராட்டத்தில் ஈடுபட்ட அனைத்து கட்சியினரிடம் பேச்சுவார்த்தை நடத்தினார்.
சமுதாயக் கட்சியினரின் கோரிக்கைகளை உயரதிகாரிகளுக்கு தெரியப்படுத்தி நடவடிக்கை எடுப்பதாகவும், அதன் பின்னரே விவசாயி பழனியப்பன் மீது நடவடிக்கை எடுபதாகவும் தெரிவித்தார். இதையடுத்து, கட்சியினர் முற்றுகை போராட்டதைக் கைவிட்டு, நாமக்கல் மாவட்டக் காவல் கண்காணிப்பாளர் பி.கண்ணம்மாளிடம் சென்று மனு அளித்தனர்.

செய்தி :: நக்கீரன்

அம்பேத்கார் சிலை அவமதிக்கப்பட்டதால் தலித் மக்கள் கொந்தளித்து உள்ளனர்: திருமாவளவன்

புதுச்சேரி, ஜன.8,2014– 
புதுவையில் நடந்த ஆர்ப்பாட்டத்தில் தலைமை தாங்கி விடுதலை சிறுத்தை கட்சி தலைவர் திருமாவளவன் எம்.பி. பேசியதாவது:–
கடந்த 2 நாட்கள் இடைவெளியில் கட்சி தலைமையின் அறிவிப்புக்கு பிறகு இங்கு 25 ஆயிரத்துக்கும் மேற்பட்ட விடுதலை சிறுத்தைகள் திரண்டு உள்ளீர்கள். சாதி வெறியர்கள் வாகனங்கள் தர மறுத்தும் சைக்கிள்களிலும், பஸ்களிலும் வந்து இங்கு திரண்டு உள்ளீர்கள். இதன் மூலம் அம்பேத்கார் சிலை அவமதித்ததால் தலித் மக்களிடம் எந்தளவுக்கு மன கொந்தளிப்பு உள்ளது என்பதை புதுவை முதல்– அமைச்சருக்கு உளவுதுறை தெரிவிக்க வேண்டும்.
புதுவை முதல்–அமைச்சர் அம்பேத்கார் சிலை அவமதிப்பை கண்டும் காணாமல் உள்ளார். கடந்த ஒரு மாதத்தில் மட்டும் புதுவையில் 4 இடங்களில் அம்பேத்கார் சிலை அவமதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது. ஒரு கும்பல் ஒளிந்து மறைந்து இருட்டில் கல் எறிவதுதான் வழக்கம். இந்தியாவிலேயே சொந்த சாதி மக்களை வன்முறைக்கு தூண்டும் ஒரே ஒரு தலைவர்தான் உள்ளார்.
ராமசாமி படையாச்சியார் சிலையை அவமதிக்க வேண்டிய அவசியம் எங்களுக்கு இல்லை. ராமசாமி படையாச்சியார் சிலையை அவமதித்தவர்களை போலீசார் உடனடியாக கைது செய்ய வேண்டும். விடுதலை சிறுத்தை அமைப்பை சேர்ந்தவர்கள் ஒரு போதும் இதுபோன்ற இழிவு செயல்களில் ஈடுபட மாட்டோம். ராமசாமி படையாச்சியார் சிலையை மீண்டும் அதே பகுதியில் வைக்க வன்னியர் மக்கள் விரும்பினால் எனது சொந்த செலவில் எனது சம்பள பணத்தில் ரூ. 1 லட்சம் நிதி தர தயாராக உள்ளேன். 
ராமசாமி படையாச்சியாரை நீங்கள் வேண்டுமானால் சாதி தலைவராக பார்க்கலாம். ஆனால் நாங்கள் பிற்படுத்தப்பட்ட மக்களுக்கு போராடிய தலைவராகத் தான் பார்க்கிறோம்.
ஓட்டு பொறுக்க முதல்– அமைச்சர் ரங்கசாமி நினைக்கிறாரா? அப்படியானால் அம்பேத்கார் சிலையை அவமதித்தவர்களை ஏன் இதுவரை கைது செய்யவில்லை?
இவ்வாறு அவர் பேசினார்.

செய்தி :: மாலைமலர்

Dalit dad traces son after wife abandons them


DC | Pramila Krishnan | 06th Jan 2014 | Chennai: In yet another sordid tale of caste discrimination fracturing love, an upper-caste girl deserted her Dalit husband and even lied to him that their baby had died at birth so as to obliterate the sole symbol of their romance gone sour.
It took him about 20 days of relentless pursuit to discover the shocking truth that her family had actually given away the infant boy to a Cuddalore government hospital watchman who sold him to a childless Muslim couple in Chennai, said Ranjith Kumar, 21, a furniture salesman at Kallakurichi (Villupuram district).
“My wife left me under pressure from her Vanniar family soon after delivering the baby at the Cuddalore government hospital in September last year.
We were in deep love. We discontinued our college studies and got married. When she became pregnant, her mother took her saying she wanted to take care of the delivery, but they destroyed our love just because I am a Dalit”, Ranjith told DC.
He said he had lodged a complaint with the police alleging that his in-laws had abused him naming his caste and separated him from his wife.
He recalled that after his wife refused to return from her mother’s place, he suspected she was lying about the baby dying at birth and undertook his own probe.
He checked at the hospital where the delivery had taken place and found out that the baby was born alive and discharged healthy.
After relentless efforts, he tracked down the watchman to whom his in-laws had given away the newborn and persuaded him to reveal the identity of the childless Chennai couple to whom he had sold the baby. Following his complaint, the police traced the child and the foster family.
They were brought before the child welfare committee at Perambalur, where his wife too was summoned. “My wife declared she did not want to have anything to do with me and the baby. So I took the infant home, where my mother is helping me to bring him up”, Ranjith said in bitter tone.
To a question, he said after the child welfare committee handed over the child to him on October 12 (2013), the foster mother approached him begging for the baby. “I lost my wife. I did not want to lose my son as well, so I told her I’m sorry”.

Source :: Deccan Chronicle

YouTube channel becomes rallying point for India's Dalits


Dalit Camera, a popular YouTube channel dedicated to India's Dalits (formerly untouchables), has become a rallying point for the community, reports Vanya Mehta.

"I believe that the protests in Delhi over the gang rape of a student have no other political significance than a mere middle class fury," feminist and Dalit activist Rekha Raj says, standing with a microphone in the city of Kottayam in the southern state of Kerala.

Men riding motorcycles slow down to hear her speak as a barrage of traffic noise competes against her voice.

Ms Raj is talking on Dalit Camera about the significance of the protests and media outcry that followed the gang rape of a middle class 23-year-old medical student in Delhi in December 2012.

In the traditional Hindu caste system, Dalits are considered the lowest and poorest. They make up 16% of India's population and are often forced into low-paying, undesirable occupations. And despite affirmative action programmes, they continue to face discrimination.

Dalit Camera is an attempt at a historical documentation of the realities of life in India "through the eyes of the untouchable".

It was founded by Bathran Ravichandran, a doctoral student of English at the English and Foreign Languages University (EFLU) in Hyderabad, the state capital of Andhra Pradesh.

The two-year-old channel run by 23-member team equipped with four video cameras boasts some 1,400 subscribers. Some of its videos have been viewed more than 50,000 times.

Mr Ravichandran comes from the "manual scavenging" caste, those who remove human excrement from toilets which do not have the modern flush system.

'Growing popularity'
He was the first from his caste in his district in Tamil Nadu in southern India to receive higher education. He says he began recording video footage of atrocities against Dalits after 20 students attacked him on the university campus.

"The incident really changed my life," Mr Ravichandran said.

He says Dalit movements and atrocities against them did not receive any exposure in the mainstream media, so through Dalit Camera he decided to "give them a voice on the internet".

Recently, they released a series of videos where Dalit women or activists were seen discussing the reaction to the Delhi gang rape and its significance for lower-caste women.

Some of these activists allege that upper-caste landowning men, who employ lower-caste women in farming, are often the perpetrators of high levels of sexual violence. These women do not have the facility to speak out and, therefore, the incidents are unrecorded in the media.

Others believe the problem of safety for women in India transcends caste and class.

Women's and children's rights activist Linkan Subudhi mobilised her friends to speak out on Dalit Camera against the state of life for women in India after the Delhi gang rape.

'Mainstream'
"Caste is not a reason for being raped. Any woman is now unsafe," she said.

Dalit Camera provides information not only on the plight of the lower-caste women, but also takes up other controversial issues, says K Satyanarayan, professor of Dalit studies at EFLU.

The channel has carried videos of activist-writer Arundhati Roy, Dalit music, and a southern Indian soft-porn actress talking about male dominance in the film industry.

Past attempts to give a voice to the Dalit community did not see the same kind of success.

In 1997, Punitha Pandiyan founded a newspaper called Dalit Masura in Tamil Nadu, but the paper struggles to stay in circulation, as often shop owners refuse to sell it because they do not want to associate with the Dalit struggle.

But since its launch in 2011, the YouTube channel has begun to gain traction outside of Andhra Pradesh. It has already gained popularity in Kerala and West Bengal and is also harnessing a small but growing following in others states as well as internationally, says Prof Satyanarayan.

"Dalit Camera has become mainstream. It has had a reach I could not have imagined," he says.

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Source :: Vanya Mehta BBC

2 Held for Attacking Dalit over Flag Row

According to sources, on Tuesday, miscreants threw cow dung on a drawing of a Dalit party’s flag, on the steps of a stream at Malavarayanatham. Around that time, two Dalits, Alexander (32), son of Thangadurai, and Immanuel Praveen (17), son of Micheal Raj, from Malavarayanatham, had noticed two caste Hindu youth roaming around the area on a bike.
The duo were identified as Nangaraja (25), son of Poolpandi, and Suresh (23), son of Vanamamalai, also from Malavarayanatham.
On Wednesday, Alexander and Praveen had informed the Dalit leaders that it was Nangaraja and Suresh who threw the cow dung at the drawing, following which the duo was questioned.
Irked by this, Nangaraja and Suresh attacked Alexander and Praveen with sickles in the evening, besides abusing them. Alexander managed to escape and informed other Dalits about the incident. In retaliation, they burnt Suresh’s bike. Suresh was admitted at the Tirunelveli GH for injuries in the head and left hand. Praveen too was hospitalised.
While both parties lodged complaints against each other, Nangaraja and Suresh were arrested for allegedly attacking Praveen.
A heavy posse of police personnel has been posted in the village to prevent any untoward incident.
SP M Durai claimed that personal vengeance between the four was the main reason behind the clash. When asked if peace talks would be conducted, he said that the villagers knew the exact reason behind the attack and hence question of peace talks did not arise.  He further said that the trouble mongers had been arrested and further clash would be averted.

Yogendra Yadav: AAP will fight for additional quota for lower castes


New Delhi, Jan 7: Senior Aam Aadmi Party leader Yogendra Yadav has said that the party has 'more clarity' now specially on issues relating to caste and reservation. "The party will fight for additional quota for the lower castes, women and the economically backward," Yadav said. The AAP was heavily criticised for being silent on issues relating to caste and reservation and focussing more on populism. Saying that the AAP is in favour of a quota for the SC/STs and OBCs, Yadav said that the party will work more for these issues. "We came from different backgrounds. We didn't have clarity about it until recently," he said. "Discrimination on the basis of caste is extreme in India. Equally worse is discrimination based on gender and class," Yadav said. AAP is currently gearing up for the 2014 Lok Sabha elections and is trying its best to reach out to a wide section of the people. The AAP announced that it would contest from 300 Lok Sabha seats in the upcoming general elections.

Source :: OneIndia 

SC body accuses CM Badal of discrimination - TOI

BHATINDA: Punjab chief minister Parkash Singh Badal's ambitious Sangat Darshan initiative came under sharp criticism from an organization of schedule caste who called it biased, restricted only to Bathinda parliamentary constituency and grossly ignores the plight of the SC community.
President of National Scheduled Castes Alliance (NSCA) Paramjit Singh Kainth on Friday said "there are 37 scheduled caste dominated villages in Punjab which have miserably failed to attract the fancy of chief minister for holding sangat darshan. Badal's 'magnanimity' showers only on non-SC dominated villages".
The allegation came close on the heels of PPCC chief Partap Singh Bajwa raising objections over the veracity of sangat darshans and Giddarbaha MLA Raja Warring terming these as only 'Akali Darshan'.
Kainth said "there are 3,788 villages in Punjab having at least 40 per cent SC population but these too were deprived from the chief minister's public audience." Despite the Planning Commission's recommendation that the Scheduled Castes Sub Plan (SCSP) should first be implemented in villages and towns with large SC presence, the authorities are not adhering to it and the biasness continues, Kainth said.
There are 34 scheduled caste MLAs in Akali Dal, BJP and Congress, there are 4 MPs, but none of them could convince Badal to hold sangat darshans at SC dominated areas.
Denying discrimination, Bathinda MLA Darshan Singh Kotfatta however, said "though senior Badal never held sangat darshan in his area, but deputy CM Sukhbir Badal and MP Harsimrat Badal have held public audience from time to time."
Source ::  Times of India 
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