*Reservation, not religion, root cause of Orissa riots*
Phulbani (Orissa) | December 31, 2007 2:05:18 PM IST
http://news.webindia123.com/news/Articles/India/20071231/859865.html

Religion may have been the trigger for this week's riots that killed at
least five in Orissa's Kandhamal district, but the root of the conflict lies
in reservations for tribals in educational institutions and government jobs.

The district, about 200 km from state capital Bhubaneswar, has a population
of over 600,000. Of them, 450,000 are from the Scheduled Tribe (ST) called
Kandha. Most of the others are from the Scheduled Caste (SC) called Pana -
over 95 percent of them Christian.

The majority of the riot victims in the hill-slope villages surrounded by
forests were Christian.

Hindu radical groups such as the Bajrang Dal and Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP)
have a sizeable following among the Kandha tribals, but "most of the
attackers were not members of these groups," a district police official told
IANS on condition of anonymity.

"Members of the Pana community are financially better off than the tribals.
They have been dominating politics and occupy powerful posts in government,"
Lambodar Kanhar, a tribal leader and secretary of Kui Samaj - the apex body
of the Kandha tribe - told IANS. Kui is the mother tongue of the Kandhas.

The region has witnessed numerous clashes in the past over attempts of
conversion and re-conversion of tribals and Panas by both Christians and
Hindus.

The trouble had escalated in the early 1990s when the Kui, Kuvi and Kuee
groups were added to the Kandhas in the Scheduled Tribes (ST) list.

Since then, Panas have been demanding their inclusion in the ST list as
well. An ST can continue to get extra benefits as a tribal even after
conversion to Christianity, but a SC member cannot.

The Kandhas have been opposing this demand.

Former state steel and mines minister Padmanabha Behera, who resigned Dec
28, and senior congress leader and Rajya Sabha member Radhakanta Naik are
both members of the Pana community.

The Kui Samaj has been alleging Behera and Nayak were helping Panas get ST
certificates. In August 2006, the group launched a campaign demanding
Behera's resignation from his ministerial post.

It organised several rallies across the district and threatened a violent
agitation if the demand was not met. However, the state government ignored
the Kui Samaj. This frustrated and angered many Kandhas.

It was in this backdrop that Hindu and Christian groups clashed on Christmas
Eve in Brahmanigaon, about 150 km from district headquarter Phulbani.

The problem intensified the same day when some people attacked the vehicle
of local Hindu leader Swami Laxmananda Saraswati near Daringbadi when he was
on his way to perform a yagna in Brahmanigaon.

Then the tribals attacked Panas, damaged their churches and drove them out
of their homes.

"Although there are isolated incidents of Panas attacking tribals, by and
large it was a collective attack by thousands of tribals on Christian Panas
and the main reason was not religion alone," a district police official
said.

(IANS)


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