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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, September 24, 2001 |
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Southern States
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Campaign against Dalits contesting poll
By R. Ilangovan
MADURAI, SEPT. 23. The Melavalavu massacre has become an
effective tool of intimidation at the hands of caste Hindus in
many of the reserved village panchayats in Madurai and other
southern districts, to prevent Dalits from contesting the local
bodies poll.
A sly but vicious campaign, ``nurtured and sustained,'' by caste
Hindus in the form of boycotting the polls, is being launched in
many of these Dalit village panchayats. The spectre of
Melavalavu, in which the village president, Murugesan, and his
men were butchered, has been haunting Dalits.
``We are landless agriculture coolies dependent on them,'' says a
65-year-old Dalit in Madurai district. The distrust has been so
well entrenched in their lives that Dalit women even refuse to
allow their men to participate in any democratic exercise, which
``may be construed'' as an affront on the sovereignty of caste
Hindus.
The militant caste Hindus of Keeripatti and Pappapatti reserved
village panchayats in Usilampatti taluk in Madurai district have
once again refused to elect Dalits as their village presidents.
Angered by the decision of the Government to extend the existing
reservation for local polls for another five years, the `local
committees' have rejected the initiatives to hold elections.
The talks at the RDO level have failed. The adamant attitude of
these villagers prevented the administration from holding the
local bodies poll for these village panchayats, since 1996. ``The
State has done a great injustice to us by not de- reserving our
village panchayats despite our repeated requests in the last five
years.''
``The Dalits are a minority here,'' claims the 55-year-old
Mayandi Thevar of Keeripatti village, which has the notoriety of
chasing away the officials who came to issue voter identity
cards. The Dalits of these two villages are too fear- struck to
participate in the poll exercise.
``We will never prevent any Dalit from filing nomination papers.
But we will not accept him as president as it involves
traditional temple honours and prestige,'' says Mr. P.K.
Chellakannan, brother of Forward Block leader, Mr. P.K. Mookaiah
Thevar of Pappapatti village. ``They themselves dislike the idea
of contesting,'' he adds.
As a fall-out of this sly campaign, the Nattarmangalam village
panchayat, which had a Dalit president in the last poll, has
refused now to re-elect a Dalit. Also, the sordid drama of
appointing a `puppet' Dalit president as in the case of
Maruthankudi village, is getting unfolded in many other reserved
villages.
Maruthankudi, which `selected' a Dalit president, banished him
later from the village itself. He drives a tri-cycle in the
streets of Madurai today, to earn a livelihood.
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Section : Southern States Previous : Govt. urged to issue I-cards to handloom weavers Next : Senior police officer for elections | |
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