Europa-parlamentet: Ny frihandelsaftale mellem EU og Indien bør gavne landets millioner af kasteløse

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European Parliament: Ensure that Dalits benefit from EU-India Free Trade Agreement

In a report on the EU-India Free Trade Agreement (FTA) the European Parliament (EP) calls on the European Council and EU Commission to work together with the Indian Government to move towards ending caste based discrimination, which affects more than 166 million Dalits (“urørlige”/kasteløse) in India.

It urges the EU to ensure that the FTA is not harmful to Dalits and that the potential benefits reach all members of society. According to the EP, this should be part of an “ambitious sustainable development chapter” in the FTA, according to a press release Friday from the International Dalit Solidarity Network (IDSN), based in Copenhagen.

The report of the European Parliament includes specific recommendations for improving the situation of Dalits and refers to the European Parliament resolution adopted on 1 February 2007 on the human rights situation of the Dalits in India.

The term Dalit covers those people who are beneath the Indian caste system and therefore often considered “untouchable” and subjected to caste discrimination.

The report requests that the European Union specifically, “Press the Indian government to tackle the issue of bonded labour, which affects millions of people – largely from the Dalit and Adivasi (indigenous groups) community,” observing that, “it is believed this issue is not being adequately addressed due to lack of administrative and political will.”

The European Parliament (EP) notes that, ‘’despite sustained economic growth, vast inequalities persist, with more than 800 million people surviving on less than two US dollar a day.’’

The Parliament is particularly concerned about underprivileged sections of the population including,”victims of discrimination such as Dalits and Adivasi’’. It also points out that these groups, ‘’experience the least progress toward achieving the Millennium Development Goals’’ and ‘’continue to face discrimination in relation to access to housing, education, employment, health care and other services.’’

The EP therefore, “Calls on the Council and the Commission to work together with the Indian government to improve the situation of those groups (including Dalits and Adivasi) and to examine future cooperation as to their contribution towards ending gender and caste discrimination with reference to its above-mentioned resolution on the human rights situation of the Dalits in India.”

This report is strongly welcomed by the International Dalit Solidarity Network (IDSN), as concrete action on this issue is long overdue and desperately needed if Indias millions os Dalits are to sustain any hope for at better future.

For more information on the issue of caste-based discrimination and the human rights violations directly associated with it, please do not hesitate to contact Gerard Oonk, Co-convenor of IDSN and Co-ordinator of the Dalit Network Netherlands, on +31-30-2321340 or [email protected].

Further information and resources can also be found on idsn.org including a factsheet with specific information on the Dalits of India.

Background:

– Caste discrimination is any distinction, exclusion, restriction, or preference based on inherited status such as work and descent, commonly originating from a division of society into castes or social categories. This chronic human rights condition, which is associated with the notion of impurity, pollution and practices of “untouchability”, involves massive violations of civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights.

– Those who are beneath the entire caste system – and are therefore literally “outcaste” as well as “untouchable” – call themselves ‘Dalits’.

– There are officially 166 million Dalits in India – NGO and expert estimates however, say the figure is closer to 200 million.

– The Dalits of India are impoverished and excluded, abused and humiliated, denied justice, exploited and considered untouchable.

– The Dalits are subject to modern day slavery in the form of bonded labour practices and the forced assignment of dangerous and demeaning duties.

– Dalits in the labour market are commonly not ensured the same rights as others and are left out of agreements on corporate social responsibility due to their status as a virtual “non-people”.

Contact also IDSNs Co-ordinator Rikke Nöhrlind on 0045 35 24 50 80 or [email protected]

The IDSN website – www.idsn.org provides a wide range of resources and material on the topic of caste-discrimination including case studies, video materials, and material directly relating to the situation in India.

Maria Brink Schleimann
Communications Officer
International Dalit Solidarity Network
Nørrebrogade 66 C, 1. sal
2200 København N
Tel: + 45 35 24 50 83
We are not untouchable
-260 million reasons to act

Online photo exhibition at www.idsn.org/wearenotuntouchable