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Redefining racism
Racism is not just about black versus white.It includes
discrimination in any form and is also about marginalised
communities fighting for their rights, says MARI MARCEL
THEKAEKARA after attending the Asia-Pacific Regional meet of the
UN World Council Against Racism.
RACISM brings images of black versus white. Right? Wrong. At the
UN World Council against Racism (WCAR), the main issue is
discrimination in any form. Asian human rights groups in
particular, point out that the standard definition of racism is
outdated and anachronistic. It is a colonial definition stemming
from the UN's Euro-centric proclivity. Race as defined in the
white Western world does not apply to the rest of the non-white
world in general or to Asia in particular. The UN Conference's
stated aims are to fight racism, racial discrimination,
Xenophobia and Related Intolerance. Marginalised or discriminated
against communities all over Asia are presenting their cases at
the Durban meeting in August 2001.
I was invited to the recently held Asia-Pacific Regional meeting
at Kathmandu. During the last few months, I have become familiar
with the National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights (NCDHR) and
their position that the caste issue had to be taken to the UN.
The Asia-Pacific groups have joined forces to back the Dalit
groups, having realised that the Dalit issue is one affecting
communities in countries as widespread as Sri Lanka, Bangladesh,
Malaysia, Pakistan, Fiji, Nepal. It exists wherever the Indian
diaspora is present, in the U.S., Canada, U.K., Europe and as far
as the West Indies, East Africa, and Mauritius. Since it is a
social construct, it remains deeply embedded in the practices of
these groups wherever they have migrated or settled.
The number of dalits who suffer active discrimination in India is
160 million and in the Indian diaspora around 240 million. This
figure becomes startlingly large if you juxtapose it cleverly
besides the entire U.S. population which is 250 million. It hits
you even harder when you realise suddenly that it is larger than
the population of Europe.
Making common cause with the dalits of Asia are the Burakumin
people of Japan, the Ozu of Nigeria, the Roma of Europe and other
marginalised groups who claim discrimination based on descent and
occupation. The Indian dalit delegation points out that the
unkindest cut of all is that Prime Minister Vajpayee recently
pledged support to the representatives of the Roma of Europe even
while his Minister Jaswant Singh swore to fight tooth and nail
the dalit attempt to internationalise casteism at the WCAR.
Watching each Asian group present its case was an eye opener,
propelling me out of the Indian context into the world of
international human rights. The range of issues was amazing. They
included forms of discrimination ranging from women and child
trafficking in Nepal, Thailand and Burma to Tibetans fighting
Chinese hegemony.
Burmese indigenous groups presented horrendous accounts of the
torture and military repression they faced together with their
problems as refugees in reluctant host countries.
Equally chilling are the stories of indigenous people from Papua,
New Guinea, Indonesia and other Asian states where forcible
sterilisation of native peoples form part of a Hitler-like
strategy to wipe these tribes off the face of the earth.
From distant New Zealand or Aotearoa were two Maori participants
who talked of the culture, rights and struggles of the Maori
people.
From nearby Nepal, women's groups sent out a howl of protest.
1,50,000 Nepali girls and women are in Indian brothels. Eighty
per cent of them are dalits. Do something to help them!
Then there were domestic workers, women from the Philipines,
SriLanka, and Thailand who were routinely cheated of their wages,
lured to work with false promises and frequently raped, beaten,
and sexually abused by employers in Hong Kong, Singapore and Arab
countries.
Indian domestic workers were not represented though our women
face similar problems in the Gulf. The plea is for the UN to
pressurise these countries into making laws which would protect
immigrant labour. Often the women have no recourse to justice
because their word has no value in the host country and a
complaint could mean deportation. So they are doubly
discriminated against.
From Pakistan, the issues being brought to the UN are those of
religious harassment and persecution of minority groups.
Christians, Sikhs, Hindus and Ahmadis have banded together to
demand a joint electorate, to end the separate electorate which
renders them ineffective politically and isolates them from
participating in mainstream politics. They also demand an end to
fundamentalist, militant groups which promote hatred against
minorities.
The UN process is a tortuous one. The NGOs fighting to place
these issues on the agenda have only consultative status. They
can shout themselves hoarse at Durban, but only governments have
votes and a final say in the Conference. However, by bringing
these hidden issues out in the open, pressure is brought to bear
on oppressive governments and human rights issues begin to find a
place for the first time. It is because of such prolonged, often
seemingly pointless battles, that issues like the environment,
pollution, gender, women's rights, child labour have begun to be
taken seriously, after decades of struggle and protests by
activists.
What the Asia-Pacific group is trying to do is to fight
collectively for a better world. Presenting caste as an Asian
issue and problem, brings in a whole new dimension. It is ironic
that governments which glorify globalisation from the rooftops
when trade and markets are discussed, now balk at the new wave of
grassroots globalisation which brings the whole world to shout
together for Narmada and dalits. Perhaps there's still hope for
humankind.
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