The rising number of crimes against members of the Scheduled Castes (SCs) are alarming, and the Tamil Nadu government should immediately declare Tirunelveli, Thoothukudi and Pudukottai as ‘caste atrocity-prone’ districts, demanded A. Kathir, executive director, Evidence, a Madurai based NGO that works towards the protection and promotion of Dalit and tribal rights.
Tamil Nadu, which has been claiming to be a champion in social justice and equality, is seeing what appears to be a rise in heinous crimes against the marginalised, and the custodians of the law are merely blaming the victims rather than taking punitive action against the perpetrators, Mr. Kathir alleged.
Chief Minister M. K. Stalin, he said, has failed in his duty to protect SCs. Stringent action must be taken against the instigators of the death of the 16-year-old in Pudukottai district, and the investigation should be swift and transparent, he added.
Vengaivayal incident in cold storage
Stating that the Pudukottai case was not a stray incident, Mr. Kathir said the number of crimes against SCs had risen manifold. “No action has been taken against the accused in heinous crimes unleashed against the Dalits over the past two years,” he charged.
The Vengaivayal incident in Pudukottai district, where faeces was found in a tank that provided drinking water to Dalits in the village, reported last year, has only been dragging on, without any firm action taken so far. While the government had formed a Commission to probe the incident, no one has been held as an accused person, to date. What is the police doing, he asked and said that in the case of the Nanguneri Dalit boy who was attacked, the accused (juvenile offenders) have been granted bail. In many other such crimes too, the accused persons were enlarged on bail, he said.
A recent modus operandi in atrocities against Dalits was to make juveniles commit heinous crime, as it enabled them to face fewer legal complications, Mr. Kathir charged. He urged CM Stalin to directly review these cases, which alone would instil confidence in the marginalised communities in T.N., he said.
Mr. Kathir further said that though a high-level committee with 63 members headed by the T.N. CM was being held twice in a year after the DMK government came to power, the atrocities had not declined. In reality, the crimes have increased. There is no follow up process, he said and urged the T.N. government to give ₹25 lakh as a compensation to the young boy’s family in Pudukottai, and arrest all the accused without delay.