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TheWeekInCongress.com
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Week Ending
July 27, 2006
H.CON.RES.139 Expressing the sense of the Congress that the United
States should address the ongoing problem of untouchability in India.
<< Click flag
for map and country data, India
The resolution preamble points out
a contradiction in the US relationship with India. The joint statement
between President Bush and India Prime Minister Singh “`[a]s leaders of
nations committed to the values of human freedom, democracy, and rule of
law, the new relationship between India and the United States will promote
stability, democracy, prosperity, and peace throughout the world [. . .
and] it will enhance our ability to work together to provide global
leadership in areas of mutual concern and interest'” does not reflect
India’s caste system that counts 250,000,000 to 300,000,000 Indies
considered ‘untouchables’ who are disenfranchised from all levels of
society and benefit in India despite the discrimination being outlawed by
India’s constitution.
The
resolution calls for resolving the matter.
More
resolution below…..
Sponsor:
Rep. Trent Franks (R-AZ-2nd)
Vote:
Passed House by voice vote July 23, 2007
Cost to
the taxpayers: No discernible cost
Earmark
Certification:
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INFORMATION
Whereas the United States and the Republic of
India have entered an unprecedented partnership;
Whereas, the July 18, 2005, Joint Statement
between President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh stated
that, `[a]s leaders of nations committed to the values of human freedom,
democracy, and rule of law, the new relationship between India and the
United States will promote stability, democracy, prosperity, and peace
throughout the world [. . . and] it will enhance our ability to work
together to provide global leadership in areas of mutual concern and
interest';
Whereas caste is the socioeconomic stratification
of people in South Asia based on a combination of work and descent;
Whereas the `Untouchables', now known as the
Dalits, and the forest tribes of India, called Tribals, who together
number approximately 250,000,000 to 300,000,000 people, are the primary
victims of caste discrimination in India;
Whereas discrimination against the Dalits and
Tribals has existed for more than 2,000 years and has included educational
discrimination, economic disenfranchisement, physical abuse,
discrimination in medical care, religious discrimination, and violence
targeting Dalit and Tribal women;
Whereas Article 17 of the Constitution of India
outlaws untouchability;
Whereas despite numerous laws enacted for the
protection and betterment of the Dalits and Tribals, they are still
considered outcasts in Indian society and are treated as such;
Whereas the Dalits and Tribals are denied equal
treatment under the law;
Whereas the National Commission on Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes has declared that many of the reported cases
of atrocities against Dalits and Tribals end in acquittals;
Whereas Dalit women are often raped with
impunity;
Whereas despite the fact that many Dalits do not
report crimes for fear of reprisals by the dominant castes, official
police statistics averaged over the past five years show that 13 Dalits
are murdered every week, five Dalits' homes or possessions are burnt every
week, six Dalits are kidnapped or abducted every week, three Dalit women
are raped every day, 11 Dalits are beaten every day, and a crime is
committed against a Dalit every 18 minutes;
Whereas the majority of temple prostitutes as
well as the majority of women trafficked in India are Dalit women;
Whereas low-caste unborn females are targeted for
abortions;
Whereas most Dalits and Tribals are among those
poorest of the poor living on less than $1 per day;
Whereas most of India's bonded laborers are
Dalits;
Whereas half of India's Dalit children are
undernourished, 21 percent are `severely underweight', and 12 percent die
before their 5th birthday;
Whereas Dalits and other low-caste people are
denied equal access to education;
Whereas the Dalits and Tribals maintain higher
illiteracy rates than non-Dalit populations;
Whereas the public education afforded Dalits and
Tribals, when available at all, is usually inadequate and conducted in
regional languages or Hindi, thereby disqualifying them from access to
India's public universities which teach in English, and from most
government positions and most advanced jobs in India, which require
English;
Whereas the HIV/AIDS epidemic in India is massive
and underreported;
Whereas the United Nations estimates that
approximately 50,000,000 Indians will die from HIV/AIDS in the next 40
years; and
Whereas Dalits and Tribals are disproportionately
affected by HIV/AIDS and are the largest high-risk population in India:
Now, therefore, be it
Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring),
That it is the sense of Congress that, as the leaders of the United States
and the Republic of India have expressed commitment to the values of human
freedom, democracy, and the rule of law, it is in the interests of the
United States to address the problem of the treatment of the Dalits and
Tribals in India in order to better meet mutual economic and security
goals by--
(1) raising the issues of caste discrimination, violence against women,
and untouchability through diplomatic channels both directly with the
Government of India and within the context of international bodies;
(2) inviting Dalit organizations to participate in the planning and
implementation of development projects from the United States Agency for
International Development and other United States development
organizations;
(3) prioritizing funding for projects that positively impact Dalit and
Tribal communities, especially Dalit women;
(4) ensuring that cooperative research programs targeting rural health
care, the HIV/AIDS epidemic, and rural technology contain proper focus on
the Dalits and Tribals;
(5) ensuring that anyone receiving funding in India from the United States
Government--
(A) is aware that it is United States Government policy that caste
discrimination is unacceptable, and that the United States is committed to
eliminating it; and
(B) treat all people equally, with regard to caste discrimination;
(6) ensuring that--
(A) qualified Dalits are in no way discouraged from working with the
United States Government or organizations receiving funding in India from
the United States Government, and that transparent and fair recruitment,
selection, and career development processes are implemented, with clear
objective criteria; and
(B) procedures exist to detect and remedy any caste discrimination in
employment conditions, wages, benefits or job security for anyone working
with the United States Government or organizations receiving funding in
India from the United States Government;
(7) encouraging United States citizens working in India to avoid
discrimination toward the Dalits in all business interactions; and
(8) discussing the issue of caste in the context of congressional
delegations.
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