| WCAR NGO FORUM DECLARATION
Dalit Excerpts
PP1
We, the representatives of local, national and international
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and other civil society groups from around the world
gathered in Durban/South Africa during the week of 28 August 3 September 2001 for
the World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related
Intolerance (WCAR), guided by our commitment in the struggle against racism and
racial discrimination and inspired by the recommendations of the NGO Forums held in
Strasbourg/France, Santiago de Chile/Chile, Dakar/Senegal and Tehran/Iran and the related
sub-regional NGO meetings held in Warsaw/Poland, Kathmandu/Nepal, Cairo/Egypt and
Quito/Ecuador, in preparation for the World Conference, hereby make the following
Declaration:
PP6
Reaffirming that all human rights are universal, indivisible,
interdependent and inalienable, and that all human beings are entitled to all these rights
irrespective of distinction of any kind such as race, class, colour, sex, citizenship,
gender, age, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, language, nationality,
ethnicity, culture, religion, caste, descent, occupation, social/economic status or
origin, health, including HIV/AIDS status, or any other status;
PP52
Recognizing that the caste system discriminates against and
enables segregation of communities on the basis of work and descent, such as Dalits in
South Asia, the Buraku people of Japan, the Osu and Oru people of Nigeria and the Griots
of Senegal and other communities resulting in flagrant violations of human rights and
dignity, with women and children of these communities being particularly vulnerable
to barbaric forms of violence.
DECLARATION OF THE NGO FORUM
CASTE AND DISCRIMINATION BASED ON WORK AND DESCENT
PP84
Work and descent based discrimination, including caste discrimination and untouchability,
being a historically entrenched, false ideological construct sanctioned by religion and
culture, which is hereditary in nature and affects over 300 million people in the Asia
Pacific and African regions at the personal, social and structural levels, irrespective of
their religious affiliation.
PP85
The practice of untouchability, rooted in the caste system, stigmatises 260 million Dalits
in South Asia as polluted or impure, thereby denying them entry
into places of religious worship, participation in religious festivals, assigning them
menial and degrading work including cleaning toilets, skinning and disposal of dead
animals, digging graves and sweeping, and the forced prostitution of Dalit women and girls
through the traditional system of temple prostitution (Devadasi).
PP86
The system of Hidden apartheid based on caste practices of distinction,
exclusion and restrictions denies Dalits enjoyment of their economic, social,
political, cultural and religious rights, exposing them to all forms of violence and
manifests itself in the segregation of housing settlements and cemeteries, segregation in
tea stalls (two-cup system), denial of access to common drinking water,
restaurants, places of worship, restrictions on marriage and other insidious measures all
of which inhibit their development as equals.
PPP87
Caste discrimination and untouchability practised against generations of
Dalits for centuries together amounts to systemic generational and cultural
Daliticide, which is the mass-scale destruction of their individual and
collective identity, dignity and self-respect for generations through cultural methods and
practices.
PP88
Any action or even any sign of an attempt to act by Dalits either individually or
collectively to assert their rights is met with extreme measures of violence such as
burning or destruction of their homes, property and crops, social boycott, rape or gang
rape of Dalit women and murder by dominant caste individuals or groups, police or the
bureaucracy, and that in such instances the State often acts with impunity and in
connivance with these perpetrators.
PP89
Work and descent based discrimination against the Buraku people of Japan has existed for
over 400 years and continues to be experienced today by over 3 million people in relation
to marriage, employment and education, with new forms of discrimination emerging such as
discriminatory propaganda and incitement to discrimination against them, especially on the
Internet.
PP90
The vulnerability of the victims of work and descent based discrimination, including caste
discrimination and untouchability, is aggravated by legal systems and law enforcement
machinery that fail to protect them and hence are responsible for the continued
perpetuation of discrimination, and by States that are themselves often the law-breakers.
NGO FORUM PROGRAMME OF ACTION
This plan of Action is informed by the following guiding principles:
DALITS AND OTHER COMMUNITIES DISCRIMINATED AGAINST ON THE BASIS OF WORK AND DESCENT
PP267
Enact suitable legislation to recognise and eradicate discrimination based on work and
descent, including caste discrimination and untouchability against Dalits, Buraku people
and other affected communities, in those countries where such legislation does not exist;
and in countries where legislation banning such discrimination already exists, take
immediate steps to create transparent and effective monitoring mechanisms including the
establishment of time-bound programmes to ensure effective implementation of such
legislation, even where the perpetrators are States or State agents.
PP268
Declare work and descent based discrimination, including caste discrimination and
untouchability, as Crimes against Humanity and enact and enforce legislation to guarantee
the right to life and security, particularly the women and children of these communities,
to criminalise violence, atrocities and incitement to discrimination and violence
committed against these communities, and to effectively and speedily prosecute offenders
at all levels.
PP269
Enforce speedy and effective legal and programmatic measures to abolish the traditional
practice of the Devadasi system and to rehabilitate the Dalit women and improve the
quality of their lives by giving them access to arable lands, proper housing, gainful
employment and education.
PP270
Undertake a survey of the situation of the Buraku people in Japan to ascertain the nature
and extent of the discrimination they continue to face despite the enactment of temporary
Special Measures by the Government of Japan, and take all necessary legal,
administrative and other measures to eradicate such discrimination.
PP271
Ensure that these communities, who have contributed to the nation-building process through
their massive but unrecognised and silent labour, are protected by law from exploitation
of their labour, including the implementation of laws that provide for a living wage and
prohibit child labour, bonded labour and manual scavenging. Also implement laws relating
to land reform that would guarantee access to and control of land for these communities,
and ensure that these lands are officially registered in the name of women of these
communities.
PP272
Create and strengthen transparent policies and systems of affirmative action, irrespective
of religious affiliation, that enhance the access of these communities, especially their
women, to higher government posts, including scientific institutions, and to posts in the
government administration, the judiciary, law enforcement agencies and the private sector,
including multinational corporations.
PP273
Allocate adequate funds to guarantee the enjoyment of their rights to livelihood, land,
education, housing, potable drinking water, sanitation, health and employment
opportunities, with special emphasis on their women, and establish effective monitoring
mechanisms to ensure full and proper utilisation of available funds.
PP274
Undertake mass-scale public awareness raising and educational initiatives, with the active
support of NGOs and other segments of civil society, in order to promote positive changes
in attitudes towards and within communities discriminated against on the basis of work and
descent based discrimination, for which the necessary budget allocation shall be earmarked
by the State.
PP275
Introduce measures of reparation for the centuries-old wrongdoings committed against these
communities through legislation and appropriate machineries for the purpose of
restitution, monetary compensation, rehabilitation and for ensuring guarantees of
non-repetition.
PP276
The United Nations to ensure the implementation by the States of all relevant
recommendations and resolutions of the UN human rights treaty monitoring bodies and of the
UN Sub-Commission on the Promotion of Human Rights, and immediately appoint a UN Special
Rapporteur to study the question of work and descent based discrimination, including caste
discrimination and untouchability, against these communities in different parts of the
world.
PP277
NGOs to lobby to ensure that the relevant Governments are made accountable to Parliament
and to the UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination for their
implementation of policies and programmes aimed at eradicating work and descent based
discrimination, including caste discrimination and untouchability, by constitutionally
mandating their Governments to submit and openly discuss the annual reports of National
Human Rights Institutions. |