Burying the Rights

Dr Suresh Mathew Dr Suresh Mathew
05 Oct 2020

She lay on the pyre, but her parents couldn’t cry over her body. Her mortal remains were consigned to flames, but they could not perform the last rituals for her. Along with the 19-year old gang rape victim of Hathras in Uttar Pradesh, the police and the administration ‘buried’ her rights too; they did it in the middle of night as if darkness would cover-up their heartless act. What happened in the remote village in Uttar Pradesh on the night of September 29 will be remembered as the culmination of bestiality perpetrated on a Dalit girl who was gangraped allegedly by four upper caste men. Bringing back the dreadful memories of Nirbhaya case, the gang of four had kidnapped the girl who was with her mother; took her to an isolated place and gangraped her; crushed her tongue; broke her backbone; and left her paralysed. After fighting 15 days for life, she breathed her last in a Delhi hospital. 

The rapists had left her in a heap of bruised body. And the administration heaped more injustice on her after her death turning a deaf ear to the pleas of her inconsolable parents to have a last glimpse of their daughter. The U.P. police, known for their highhandedness and reckless behaviour, threw the laws to the wind and cremated her. In a recent landmark verdict, the Calcutta High Court made it mandatory that bodies of Covid 19 patients should be handed over to the relatives of the deceased for performing last rites. When even Covid victims have a right to get a dignified funeral, what the U.P. police and other wings of administration did speak volumes about their insensitivity to human beings.      

The Hathras incident reinforces that caste cauldron continues to boil in the State. Those at the helm of affairs cannot wash their hands off portraying a rosy picture. There had been many ‘Hathrases’ in the past wherein Dalit men and women had been bumped off by men who feel a sense of impunity on the false notion of caste privileges. The governments have not come down heavily on those who have orchestrated killings on the strength of their caste. Stringent National Security Act is imposed against cow slaughters and protesters, but perpetrators of caste conflagration are often allowed to go scot-free.  

Dalits and Adivasis are the worst victims of rights violations. Instead of standing with them, the governments are seen to throttle people and organizations who stand with those who have been denied their rights. We saw it when the government froze the accounts of Amnesty International in India forcing it to close down operations in the country. Amnesty is in the forefront of fighting for human rights. The government did force the Greenpeace to shut down two of its offices in India in 2019. There were raids last year in the offices of the Lawyers Collective, yet another organization which promotes human rights, rendering its function difficult. There are many human rights activists who have been taken into custody and put behind bars in the last couple of years for standing with the poor, the Adivasis and the marginalized. Hope seems to recede under a government which cracks the whip against those who speak up for the voiceless, but treats rights’ violators with kid gloves.   
 

Recent Posts

"Traditional" Christmas celebrations fail to highlight the pain, rejection, and humility surrounding Jesus' birth. We must question our focus on festive traditions. Let us recognise modern-day margina
apicture M L Satyan
23 Dec 2024
The Church, by any measure, cannot fully provide compensatory justice to Dalit Christians, who have been forced to live as outcastes for thousands of years, but it has the capacity to negotiate and pr
apicture Dr Anthoniraj Thumma
23 Dec 2024
The Artha??stra, which he is supposed to have written, was actually composed by many persons over many decades. In any case, Chanakya's doctrines did not help India. Every foreigner could easily captu
apicture A. J. Philip
23 Dec 2024
Christmas now revolves around Santa, commerce, and grand celebrations, sidelining its core message of love, forgiveness, and compassion. Christmas urges generosity, transcending divisions, and fosteri
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
23 Dec 2024
Seventy-five years after adopting the Constitution, India faces a stark disconnect between its ideals and practices. Ambedkar's vision of justice and equality is overshadowed by systemic failures, cas
apicture Jaswant Kaur
23 Dec 2024
, we need to understand that the Constitution-making process was the biggest effort of reconciliation in Indian society. Baba Saheb Ambedkar understood this very well, as did the Congress leadership a
apicture Vidya Bhushan Rawat
23 Dec 2024
Christmas symbolises humanity's relentless search for truth. It prompts and unites human desires for metaphysical understanding, transcending materialism and relativism. Embracing truth offers purpose
apicture Peter Fernandes
23 Dec 2024
Tavleen Singh critiques the Taliban's misogyny but overlooks parallels between religious fundamentalism and Hindu nationalism. Both enforce oppressive norms, targeting women and minorities, cloaked as
apicture Ram Puniyani
23 Dec 2024
Donald Trump and Narendra Modi are adept at divisive rhetoric, authoritarianism, rewriting history and exploiting their nations' fault lines. Both have been fuelling communal and cultural divides whil
apicture Mathew John
23 Dec 2024
Listen to choirs this Christmas season, but even as you do, take back with you a deeper lesson than the words the songwriters wrote, realising that choral harmony could be a wonderful way to live as a
apicture Robert Clements
23 Dec 2024