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Row as May orders consultation on caste discrimination issue

LONDON: Dalit issue facing UK Prime Minister Theresa May took a new turn on Friday after her government announced a “full public consultation” on the matter – a

Published on: Sep 4, 2016, 08:27:33 IST
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LONDON: Dalit issue facing UK Prime Minister Theresa May took a new turn on Friday after her government announced a “full public consultation” on the matter – a process that usually precedes parliament legislation, but is taking place on an issue that has sharply divided the Indian community.

HT Image
HT Image

The issue also has implications for India-UK relations, with the Indian government opposed to Britain codifying caste in law. Groups opposed to legislation on the issue welcomed the new consultation, while those supporting it reacted with fury on Saturday, accusing the May government of pandering to upper-caste individuals and groups.

A key aim of the consultation will be to obtain the views of the public on whether additional measures are needed to ensure victims of caste discrimination have appropriate legal protection and effective remedies under the 2010 Equality Act, official sources said. Before taking any decisions, the government will carefully consider the responses to the consultation, which will run for 12 weeks from its commencement date, they added.

Rival groups have been lobbying the government intensely this week, with some denying the existence of caste-based discrimination in Britain and as such rejecting any law for the purpose, and others seeking the law to deal with the alleged discrimination.

Governments headed by David Cameron since 2010 have supported the view of Hindu-Sikh-Jain groups opposing the legislation, not acting on the issue after it was written into the Equality Act of 2010. The groups see May’s decision on Friday as another positive step.

Caste-based discrimination is not expressly prohibited under the equality legislation, but section 9 of the Equality Act 2010, as amended, requires the government to introduce secondary legislation to make caste an aspect of race, thereby making caste discrimination a form of race discrimination.

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