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Vested interests and musclemen rule khap panchayats: Swami Agnivesh

2010-06-20 14:10:00


Calling honour killings diabolical, social activist and former Haryana
minister Swami Agnivesh says khap panchayats must end violence
unleashed in the name of ancestral lineage. He admits that he was
backed by caste councils in the past, but at that time these 'were
credible bodies'.

The Arya Samaj leader said khap panchayats should 'realise the
exigencies of modernity and stop interfering in the private lives of
villagers using violent tactics'.


'I was also backed by the khap panchayats in my political career in
the state in the 1970s,' Agnivesh told IANS in an interview. 'But
then, the khap panchayats were credible and influential bodies with a
social outlook.'


The Arya Samaj leader alleged that the khap panchayats lost direction
in the past 10 years or so.


'They have been highly politicised. Vested interests and musclemen are
holding sway. These panchayats have become highly male-dominated.
Forget about women, even young men have no say at the khap meetings,'
he said.


Agnivesh condemned the effort by khaps to defend and glorify people
sentenced to death for honour killings in the Karnal case in which a
young couple from Kaithal district in Haryana had been brutally killed
in 2007 for marrying in the same 'gotra', or sub-caste.


Khap panchayats should instead cooperate in ensuring the rule of the
law and strive for social reforms, he said.


Agnivesh pointed out that honour killings have become an all-India phenomenon.


'Recently, disturbing reports of honour killings have come from
Jharkhand, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh. Worst, in the national
capital, a couple was tortured throughout the night and electrocuted
last week. If this happens in New Delhi, one can imagine the situation
in remote rural areas,' he said.


However, he said the 'epicentre' of such killings remains Haryana,
western Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan.


'Nowadays, no village is a completely isolated entity. Villages are
not cocoons. The divisions and boundaries between a city and the
villages have been blurred as several villagers go to city for work,'
he said.


'Like that, many city people have strong links with the rural areas.
So, the ban on marriages among people from the same village is neither
logical nor practical,' he argued.


While emphasising that honour killings were no answer, Agnivesh said
there was some merit to the objections to same gotra marriages.


'Medical science is against marriage between close relatives. Arya
Samaj founder Dayanand Saraswati advocated marriage between people
belonging to distant places. But this does not mean an Arya Samaj
priest has the right to refuse to conduct a same-gotra marriage. Nor
is killing the answer to a same-gotra marriage,' he stressed.


Will the Arya Samaj initiate steps to create social awareness in
khap-dominated regions? Agnivesh claims moves are afoot.


He has already addressed 600 college girls in Rohtak in Haryana,
calling upon them to strive for social reforms.


Agnivesh said he could understand why political leaders of the region
were adopting a 'meaningful silence' or indirectly supporting the khap
panchayats.


'As far as khap panchayat leaders are concerned, I am ready to meet
them without any fear at any place or time they propose. I am
confident of convincing them to stop causing social tension in the
name of honour of the gotras,' Agnivesh said.


(George Joseph can be contacted at georg...@ians.in )

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