Once again on Mayawati..............

India: Monuments Will Not Save The Dalits
Monday, 12 January 2009, 11:42 am
Press Release: Asian Human Rights Commission

INDIA: Monuments Will Not Save The Dalits

The Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) is a political party that has contested
elections harnessing the Dalit votes. The BSP's woman leader, Ms.
Mayawati, a dalit herself, has been claiming that her party and the
Uttar Pradesh state government she leads, is actively involved in
trying to meliorate the living condition of the Dalit community.

The BSP, that claims to be working for 'revolutionary social and
economic movement of change with a view to realise … the supreme
principles of universal justice, liberty, equality and fraternity
enunciated in the Constitution of India' however has achieved nothing
much in this front. The BSP, like most of their counter parts in the
country, is not interested in the welfare of the ordinary people, but
is preoccupied with the welfare of the people who control the party.
Uttar Pradesh, with an estimated 243,286 sq. kilometre land area,
occupies 1/3rd of the highly fertile Gangetic plain. Yet, it is one of
the most backward states of India and is the most populated state in
the country with an estimated 190 million people. The backwardness of
the state owes much to its elected representatives. 100 out of the 403
seats in the state assembly are occupied by individuals having
criminal antecedents, ranging from charges of corruption, murder, rape
and robbery, to name a few. The Chief Minister, Ms. Mayawati herself,
is accused of corruption involving 40 million USD, in the infamous Taj
Corridor case.

The state underperforms on various fronts below the national average.
For example, the literacy rate is 57.36 percent for the state as
opposed to the higher national average of 65.4 percent. India's
population stabilisation solely rests upon two states, Uttar Pradesh
and Bihar. Yet, Uttar Pradesh has a population growth rate of 25.8
percent against the national average of 23.8 percent. Even according
to the state government, in terms of social development indicators
like medical facilities, teacher-student ratio in primary schools,
death rate, infant mortality rate, literacy, per capita income,
electrification of villages and per capita power consumption, the
state currently lag behind other parts of the country. Nothing
tangible was achieved in the state to change the status quo after the
forming of the current government in May 2007.

What is visible however is the omnipresence of statues and decorations
in the urban areas, particularly within the cities, where huge statues
of Mayawati are erected. Whenever there was criticism against the
Chief Minister or a member of the government, stiff resentment was the
response, claiming that these are rumours spread by the upper caste or
the opposition.

It is however true that the current administration will have a tough
way forward if at all the government is serious in addressing the
people's need. The bureaucracy of the state has a few decades of
corruption, nepotism and criminality as their practice and experience
to shed off. Experiences and practices that are rooted within the
system will take time to be removed. Of particular importance is the
widespread practise of corruption. Every aspect of public life in the
state is under the influence of corruption. The BSP like many other
political parties in the country is known to demand 'donations' from
the rich and the poor alike. Those who pay higher amounts of such
donations expect to receive favours from the government.

Corruption percolates from the top to the lowest levels of the
administration. For example, it is common for the government licensees
like the Public Food Distribution System (PDS) agents to sell food
grains in the black-market. The food grains supplied to the PDS shops
by the government to be distributed for the poor, in these conditions
never reach the intended population. The effect of this form of
corruption is devastating particularly in rural areas where the poor
live. The state police, an agency mandated to take actions against
this is equally or even worse in terms of corruption. It is public
knowledge that recruitment and promotion in the state police,
particularly for the lower and middle ranks, are made after paying
huge amounts in bribes. It is equally known that the officers,
majority of them, soon start making good of the bribe they paid by
demanding and accepting bribes.

Similar state of apathy exists in state-run health centers. Government
hospitals are understaffed and ill-equipped. In rural areas, public
health service centers, commonly referred to as PHCs, remain closed
mostly throughout the year, denying health services to the poor
villagers. Schools are also equally understaffed. Several government
schools remain closed or as good as non-functional, since the school
buildings are no more safe to house the children.

The poor in the villages mostly face the brunt of this administrative
neglect. The state has a predominantly rural population, of which an
estimated 11 percent is unaccounted due to caste prejudices and errors
in the census data. The state is home for malnutrition, starvation,
deaths from starvation, high rates of mortality and the prevalence of
malnutrition-induced deceases. A high percentage of those who face
this harsh reality in life are the members of the Dalit community.

Almost 90 percent of the Dalits work as landless agricultural
labourers. Yet, when the central government initiated discussions for
a national land reforms policy and a law, the BSP was in the forefront
to oppose the move. A national land reforms law with statutory
limitations on individual and collective land holdings will help to
improve the living condition of the poor. States like Kerala in India
where such policies are in force since long, has proved that land
reforms will not only reduce poverty, but has also the potential to
end caste based discrimination.

It is in this backdrop that Mayawati and the state government she
leads is preparing for a state-wide celebration of Mayawati's 53rd
birthday. Billions of Indian Rupees, estimated to be about 975 million
USD, is projected to be spent for building monuments by the state
administration in the coming years. The question is, would these
monuments be later remembered for the glory of a Dalit leader or is to
remain as the ghosts of her reckless administration?
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