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India Dalit boy 'killed over high-caste man's name'

Pakistanis seem to have myopic vision of the world, going by topics which are discussed under World Affairs tag, one may assume, for Pakistanis India is the World.

Sorry but I looked through all the possible subforums and it looks to me like the OP posted it in the most appropriate forum... It shouldn't be in Indian Defence because it has nothing to do with Defence...
 
If that is true, don't you think it is hypocritical for Indians to mock Chinese over a road accident, while in the year 2010 alone I have found countless articles about Dalits being burnt alive?

Didn't you see the links in the first page?

you can see that many cases between communities in any part of the world,some times it may be due to personal problems and not on caste system,the incidents are very remote and concentrated in places with lowest litracy rates,they dont show the treatment of dalits in the whole country
 
Sorry but I looked through all the possible subforums and it looks to me like the OP posted it in the most appropriate forum... It shouldn't be in Indian Defence because it has nothing to do with Defence...

There should be an indian social issues or indian domestic issues subform, as those are of high interest to forum members.
 
you can see that many cases between communities in any part of the world,some times it may be due to personal problems and not on caste system,the incidents are very remote and concentrated in places with lowest litracy rates,they dont show the treatment of dalits in the whole country

Nepal is a Hindu country as well, but you don't get Dalits being burnt alive there on a regular basis, like in India.
 
Nepal is a Hindu country as well, but you don't get Dalits being burnt alive there on a regular basis, like in India.

there can be other reason for killing other than only blaming caste system,there must be some personal problems for killing the dalits,you cannot see it only through one angle
 
Dalit killed for digging own well



Gautam (name changed) is a police constable in Satara’s Man taluka, but even he could not save his brother-in-law Madhukar Ghatge. Ghatge (48), a Dalit farmer and a father of three, retired from the Railways a few years ago and moved home from Mumbai to farm on his family’s 5-acre plot here. He was murdered last week by upper-caste villagers who did not want him to dig a well on his own property.
It would have been the first well in Kulakjai village on land owned by a Dalit.

The police said Ghatge was hacked so violently that even the earth-moving machine he was using at the time was damaged.

‘They left him to die’

“They were armed with axes and iron rods. They attacked him and left him to bleed to death,” said Ghatge’s 21-year-old son Tushar, a law student at a local college.

Ten people have been arrested and charged under the Atrocities Act and special police teams deployed. “They said his well would mean less water for the common well in the village,” said Tushar.

Ghatge tried to reason, saying he had acquired permission from the zilla parishad and panchayat samiti and had promised to share the water in times of scarcity, but the crowd grew menacing.

Ten arrested

The field where Ghatge was digging his well is about 5 km away from the ‘Harijan basti (settlement)’ where the village’s lower castes live.

As word of Ghatge being hacked to death last week at around 9 pm spread, his son Tushar told his mother and two younger sisters to bolt the doors and windows and dashed to the field.

“He was lying in a pool of blood,” he told HT. “No one came forward to help.” Tushar carried his father to the nearest hospital 2 km away. He died on the way.

Ten people were arrested and two others listed as absconding. Local officials declined comment.

Even Ghatge’s younger brother Sudhakar, the deputy sarpanch, would only confirm that the gramsabha had sanctioned the well.
“Rs 60,000 was granted in funds through a scheme,” he added.

‘Peaceful’ town

Back at the Harijan basti on Saturday, Ghatge’s neighbours gathered at his house to pay homage. They put up photographs of Dr B.R. Ambedkar, champion of the Dalit cause, and Gautam Buddha — most basti residents have converted from Hinduism in a bid to escape the stain of their caste.

Friends and relatives from Mumbai sat in stunned silence. “A special police team has been deployed to avoid any trouble,” said Satara District Superintendent of Police Prakash Mutyal.

It’s always been a peaceful town, he frowned.
 
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