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Caste Discrimination in flood relief work

The uncertainties of life… : Living through Waters of Dejection. A Study of caste discrimination in relief work following when the Yamuna floods occurred during the Commonwealth Games hitting the people living in low lying areas, mainly inhabited by Dalits. The study was conducted by the National Dalit Watch of NCDHR, which Monitors Disaster Response and Preparedness for Inclusion and Equity. The National Dalit Watch have also conducted similar studies in the states of Karnataka, Assam and Andhra Pradesh in the aftermath of unprecedented 2009 floods, unclothing the hidden issues of caste based discrimination in disasters. You can access these on NDW blogspot >>

Captured by Cotton

ICN/ SOMO report ‘Captured by Cotton’ >>  Dalit girls working under slave like conditions in India’s garment industry: Multinational clothing brands are sourcing from cotton spinning mills in Tamil Nadu that use teenage girls who are exploited and subjected to what the ILO terms the ‘worst forms of child labour’. The girls are not offered fair wages and work towards a promise of being paid a lump sum of withheld wages, after three years employment. The scheme is called the ‘Sumangali Scheme’ and it is not uncommon that at the end of the three years the girls are not paid and have effectively been used as slaves.These are some of the key findings in the report by the India Committee of the Netherlands (ICN) and the Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations (SOMO). (May 2011)

 

Every 30 Minutes a Farmer in India commits suicide

The report, Every Thirty Minutes: Farmer Suicides, Human Rights, and the Agrarian Crisis in India, released by the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice (CHRGJ) and the The International Human Rights Clinic (IHRC) looks critically at India’s farmer suicide epidemic. A quarter of a million Indian farmers have committed suicide in the last 16 years—an average of one suicide every 30 minutes and Dalits are particularly hard hit. (April 2011)

Statement from the CHRGJ on Nepal Census

'Nepal’s Human Rights Obligations to Conduct an Accurate & Non-Discriminatory Census' - Statement from the CHRGJ (Center for Human Rights and Global Justice) - May 2011