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Tamil Nadu: Dalit boy dies by suicide, kin allege caste harassment

The Dalit boy’s family alleged that he was assaulted after he was seen speaking to a girl from the OBC community

Updated on: Nov 7, 2023, 06:58:04 IST
By , Chennai
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The family of a 16-year-old Dalit boy, who died by suicide on November 3 in Tamil Nadu’s Pudukkottai district, has filed a police complaint that stating that he faced caste-based harassment and was assaulted by students belonging to the Other Backward Community (OBC). The assault was allegedly a consequence of the Dalit boy seen speaking to a girl, who belongs to the OBC community, his family said.

HT Image
HT Image

The victim, a class 11 student of a government boys higher secondary school in Keeranur, hailing from a poor family. The girl studied in another government school where the victim had previously studied up to class 10. “They had beaten up my son because of our caste,” his mother Uma told reporters.

“He had gone to school normally. But after the returning from school, he was unable to bear the assault. So, he died by suicide,” she said.

Initially, the police had registered a case of unnatural death but have now altered it to include sections under the SC/ST Prevention of Atrocities Act and section 306 (abetment to suicide) of the Indian Penal Code.

“The case came to me after being altered. We are conducting the investigation, questioning witnesses and cross verification is on-going,” the investigating officer said, seeking anonymity.

“We will soon make arrests, so until then we do not want to reveal any information as it may affect the enquiry process,” the officer said.

The victim’s body was sent for post mortem on November 4.

The development comes a week after, in another incident, six men belonging to the Backward Community were arrested by Tamil Nadu’s Tirunelveli police for allegedly stripping two Dalit men and urinating on them before robbing them of their cash and mobile phones.

Concerned over a series of such recent atrocities against Dalits in Tamil Nadu, the Dalit Intellectual Collective based in Chennai has urged chief minister MK Stalin to call for an all-party meeting to consult ways to end this. “The lukewarm response of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) government is alarming,” C Lakshmanan, convener of the collective said in a statement. “The series of violent attacks and humiliation against Dalits is consistent with the observation in ‘Caste Pride’(a book published in 2023) that Tamil Nadu provided a template of atrocities against Dalits for the entire country.”

  • Divya Chandrababu
    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Divya Chandrababu

    Divya Chandrababu is an award-winning political and human rights journalist based in Chennai, India. Divya is presently Assistant Editor of the Hindustan Times where she covers Tamil Nadu & Puducherry. She started her career as a broadcast journalist at NDTV-Hindu where she anchored and wrote prime time news bulletins. Later, she covered politics, development, mental health, child and disability rights for The Times of India. Divya has been a journalism fellow for several programs including the Asia Journalism Fellowship at Singapore and the KAS Media Asia- The Caravan for narrative journalism. Divya has a master's in politics and international studies from the University of Warwick, UK. As an independent journalist Divya has written for Indian and foreign publications on domestic and international affairs.Read More

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