Friday, December 27, 2013

Fighting caste discrimination



Caste is one of India’s most enduring institutions and still retains its hold on Indian society. For those not fortunate to be born in the higher echelons of the caste hierarchy, life can be difficult indeed. Despite government efforts, caste discrimination is still rife, and low-caste Indians have to bear the brunt of poverty, illiteracy and violence. Lenin Raghuvanshi is in the forefront of the fight against caste discrimination, to ensure a just and equal society.

Raghuvanshi is the founder of the People’s Vigilance Committee on Human Rights (PVCHR), which fights for the rights of marginalized people in several North Indian states, especially in the area around Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh.

Raghuvanshi was born in an upper caste family, which he describes as “feudal”. He got a bachelor’s degree in ayurveda, modern medicine and surgery from the State Ayurvedic College in Haridwar. But the social inequities that faced India made him take up the cause of bonded labourers. This is when he noticed that not a single bonded labourer came from the upper caste, and realised that the problem was essentially caste.

In 1996, Raghuvanshi founded PVCHR to fight the caste system. He works to ensure basic rights to vulnerable groups like children, women, Dalits, tribes and minorities. Raghuvanshi and his team works at the grassroots level in Varanasi and around 200 villages in Uttar Pradesh and five other states. PVCHR works to eliminate situations that give rise to the exploitation of vulnerable and marginalized groups, and to start a movement for a people-friendly movement (Jan Mitra Samaj) through an inter-institutional approach.

Raghuvanshi has his task cut out for him since the lot of Dalits and other oppressed minorities continues to be dismal. “In the past, if anyone from the lower caste breached the unwritten law of caste hierarchy, the person would be beaten up in public. Now the person will be shot dead and the village burnt down and the women raped. A bridegroom riding a horse during his wedding, an enterprising peasant digging a well on his land, if a boy falls in love with a girl – do you kill them? Yet, if they belong to the Dalit caste they are killed. We still say that there is rule of law in India,” he said in his acceptance speech while receiving the Gwangju Prize for Human Rights.

He is also concerned about the plight of women and children in this country. “India is still very much a patriarchal and caste-based society with gender discrimination. The destructive effects of gender discrimination, patriarchal oppression and the semi-feudal society so prevalent in 21st century India are manifest in our 55 million children, employed at times in subhuman conditions,” he says in a newspaper interview.

Raghuvanshi received the Gwangju Human Rights Award in 2007. He was made an Ashoka Fellow in 2001 and was presented the International Human Rights Prize of the City of Weimar (Germany) in 2010. Raghuvanshi once said to a newspaper that caste discrimination is so rife in Bundelkhand that a Dalit has to take off his chappal and hold it in his hand if a person belonging to the Thakur caste approaches. It’s not something that would make us proud.
How can you Help?
Caste approaches is not something that would make us proud 



Contact details of the NGO/Institution

Name :  Lenin Raghuvanshi 
Email ID  lenin@pvchr.asia
Contact Number :  9935599333
Address  PVCHR Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh 

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Woman detained at police station during night



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: PVCHR Communication <cfr.pvchr@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, Dec 18, 2013 at 1:43 PM
Subject: Woman detained at police station during night
To: covdnhrc <covdnhrc@nic.in>, jrlawnhrc <jrlawnhrc@hub.nic.in>
Cc: "Dr. Lenin Raghuvanshi" <lenin@pvchr.asia>


To,
The Chairperson
National Human Rights Commission
New Delhi
 
Dear Sir,
 
I want to bring in your kind attention towards the news published in Times of India on dated 14 December, 2013 regarding Woman detained at police station during night http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/kochi/Woman-detained-at-police-station-during-night/articleshow/27316962.cms?intenttarget=no
 
Therefore it is a kind request please take appropriate action at earliest.
 
Thanking You
 
Sincerely Yours
 
Lenin Raghuvanshi
Secretary General
PVCHR

Woman detained at police station during night

TNN | Dec 14, 2013, 03.11 AM IST


KOCHI: The Kerala high court on Friday ordered that an FIR should be registered against a sub inspector of police for illegally detaining a woman at the police station all night and beating her.

A division bench comprising justices Antony Dominic and A V Ramakrishna Pillai ordered registering an FIR against Aranmula sub inspector Vinod Kumar after a woman produced before the court in a habeas corpus case informed the court that she was detained at the police station during night and slapped by the sub inspector.

The woman was produced at the high court by police on Friday morning as per the court's interim order on a habeas corpus petition filed by her mother. The mother's petition had said her daughter, who got married recently, had gone missing after she went with her husband to his brother's house at Palakkad on October 9.

Based on the court's interim order, the couple was located by police near Aranmula and was presented before the court on Friday morning.

During the hearing, the woman told the court about her plight and the court directed the police officer in charge of high court's security to come to the court along with a woman police constable. The police team was asked to record the woman's statement about the ill-treatment by the SI in writing. When the court commenced hearing in the afternoon, the police team submitted the recorded statement to the court.

After perusing the statement, the court said it specified non-bailable offences committed by the sub inspector. The court then issued an order to Pathanamthitta superintendent of police to register a case against the SI and asked the director general of police to provide an explanation regarding the incident.

According to section 160 of Criminal Procedure Code, no police officer should summon a woman to a police station as a witness. Police should record the statement of women witnesses at the place where they reside.

Even if a woman is accused of a crime and is to be arrested, it should be avoided between sunset and sunrise, according to guidelines on arrest issued by National Human Rights Commission.
 

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Nearly 2,000 kids in jail with mothers, says NCRB


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: PVCHR Communication <cfr.pvchr@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Oct 3, 2013 at 11:52 AM
Subject: Nearly 2,000 kids in jail with mothers, says NCRB
To: covdnhrc <covdnhrc@nic.in>, jrlawnhrc <jrlawnhrc@hub.nic.in>
Cc: "Dr. Lenin Raghuvanshi" <lenin@pvchr.asia>


To,
The Chairperson
National Human Rights Commission
New Delhi
 
Dear Sir,
 
I want to bring in your kind attention towards the news published in Indian Express on 3rd October, 2013 regarding Nearly 2,000 kids in jail with mothers, says NCRB
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/nearly-2000-kids-in-jail-with-mothers-says-ncrb/1177444/

Nearly 2,000 kids in jail with mothers, says NCRB

VijaitaSingh : New Delhi, Thu Oct 03 2013, 02:46 hrsSmallLargePrint
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Front
Prisons across the country were also home last year to nearly 2,000 children below the age of six years who were forced to live there with their mothers, the National Crime Records Bureau has found.
Although Supreme Court guidelines say they should be kept away from the barracks where their mothers are lodged, officials said it has not always been practical to do so.
The 2012 data compiled by the NCRB from 1,394 prisons in the country also shows that 1.2 per cent of inmates were suffering from mental illnesses.
The data shows 1,813 children were living with their mothers in prisons, with jails in Uttar Pradesh topping the list with 431, followed by West Bengal (220), Madhya Pradesh (163), Bihar (151) and Jharkhand (132).
"There are strict SC guidelines on how to deal with children of women inmates, both undertrials and convicts. We try not to keep the children with their mothers in the barracks but sometimes it is not possible as they are too small to be left alone," said IG (prisons), West Bengal, Ranvir Kumar.
"We then show some leniency and allow them in prisons at nights. We have to be considerate when it comes to children who are as young as an infant. West Bengal has a higher number as most of these women are from Bangladesh and have been arrested under the Foreigners Act for illegally crossing into the country," he said.
The NCRB also found that as many as 44,470 inmates had mental illnesses, with Orissa accounting for 496 cases, followed by Andhra Pradesh (443), Karnataka (383), Haryana (362) and Kerala (296).
"Although the jail manual says that mentally ill prisoners should be sent to asylums, it is not possible all the time as the degree of illness also varies. We try to keep such prisoners in separate wards and have convicts man their wards so that they do not inflict any injury on themselves. They are treated at the jail hospitals and there have been instances where such prisoners have recovered also," said a senior jail official.

Therefore it is kind request please take appropriate action
Thanking You
Sincerely Yours
Shruti Nagvanshi
Managing Trustee
&
Shirin Shabana Khan
Senior Manager
Peoples' Vigilance Committee on Human Rights
Mobile No. +91-9935599330

Dasna jailer brands inmate

-------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Pvchr <cfr.pvchr@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, Dec 12, 2013 at 6:44 PM
Subject: Dasna jailer brands inmate
To: covdnhrc@nic.in
Cc: jrlawnhrc@hub.nic.in, pvchr.adv@gmail.com


To,
The Chairperson
National Human Rights Commission
New Delhi

Dear Sir, 

I want to bring in your kind attention towards the news published in Times of India on12December,2013regardingDasna jailer brands inmate http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/noida/Dasna-jailer-brands-inmate/articleshow/27232425.cms

Therefore it is a kind request please take appropriate earliest. 

Thanking You

Sincerely Yours

Rohit Kumar
Detention Watch Co-ordinator
PVCHR

Dasna jailer brands inmate

Purusharth Aradhak,TNN | Dec 12, 2013, 04.22 AM IST
Dasna jailer brands inmate
The inmate has alleged that the deputy jailer brutally beat him up for not giving "extortion money" after which he branded his name on his back.
GHAZIABAD: A case of inhumanity has been reported from Dasna Jail with a deputy jailer being accused of branding his initials with a hot iron rod on the back of an inmate. The victim, Karan alias Chottu, a resident of Karawal Nagar in northeast Delhi, was lodged in jail two months ago on charges of murder. On Tuesday, when he was produced before the city court, he narrated his nightmarish experience.

The deputy jailer, Rajesh Kumar Pandey, allegedly brutally thrashed the inmate after which he reportedly sustained a fracture in the neck and leg. The victim's wife had gone to the jail to meet her husband last Friday and Sunday, but jail authorities did not allow her to meet him.

The wife has requested the court to conduct the inmate's medical examination to determine the atrocities done to him. The court has summoned Dasna jail superintendent for the next court hearing on December 12 to reply on the issue.

The inmate has alleged that the deputy jailer brutally beat him up for not giving "extortion money" after which he branded his name on his back. Counsel for Karan, S P Singh, on Tuesday moved an application in the court seeking strict action against Pandey. Singh has alleged in his application that Pandey had allegedly demanded Rs 60,000 from his client and forcefully extracted Rs 10,000 from his pocket on December 3.

When Karan pleaded that he could not give such big amount to him, Pandey threatened that if he failed to give Rs 50,000, he would face dire consequences. On December 4, Pandey, along with three other people, started beating him up. On December 5, Pandey beat Karan again and allegedly branded "RKP" on his back," the court application cited.