A/HRC/31/56
2.
Access to justice and policing
60.
Entrenched caste discrimination within the criminal justice system translates into
victims facing multiple obstacles at every stage of the legal process: from lodging a
complaint to investigation, trial and judgement. Often, the fear of reprisal prevents victims
from reporting attacks, resulting in underreporting and impunity. In South Asia, most
violence against Dalits and Dalit communities is underreported and not addressed by
Governments.37
61.
Due to caste prejudice or deference shown to perpetrators from higher castes, law
enforcement officers may refuse to register and/or investigate cases brought by individuals
from lower castes.38 In some instances, these officers perceive caste-based discrimination as
a social issue to be solved within the community rather than a crime. Refusal to register
such cases as criminal offences is justified as preserving “social harmony”.39
62.
According to a recent study,40 the ways in which police refuse to register caste-based
atrocities include: (a) showing apathy; (b) discouraging victims and encouraging
compromises between the victims and the accused; (c) delaying arrival; (d) threatening or
inflicting violence on victims; (e) bringing false cases against victims at the behest of the
accused to pressure them to accept a compromise; (f) accepting bribes from the accused to
drop the victim’s case; and (g) declaring the accused innocent without following due
process.
63.
Even if such crimes pass the first stage in the process, there are long pretrial periods
and the acquittal rates for these crimes are extremely high. Lower castes are also
disproportionately represented in pretrial detention, owing to indiscriminate arrests, slow
investigations and prosecutions, weak legal aid systems and inadequate safeguards against
lengthy detention periods.41
3.
Right to political participation
64.
Political marginalization emerges as a consequence of discrimination against
caste-affected communities, who are excluded from or underrepresented in both local and
national decision-making. Individuals from lower-caste groups may face numerous
obstacles to participation in public elections and equal opportunities to run for and be
elected to public positions. These include being subject to threats, harassment and physical
attacks; being forcibly prevented from standing in elections or, if elected, forced to resign
or not to exercise their mandate; being excluded from electoral rolls; and being denied the
right to vote.42
65.
Caste-affected groups tend to be outvoted and unable to secure proportional
representation. For instance, in Mauritania, where the Haratine comprise 40 to 60 per cent
of the population, according to statistics collected by the Initiative pour la Résurgence du
Mouvement Abolitionniste Mauritanie, only 11 of 147 members of Parliament are Haratine.
In Yemen, the Muhamasheen have no political representation at the national level.43
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
“Caste-based Discrimination in South Asia”, p. 4.
See E/CN.4/Sub.2/2001/16, para. 26.
OHCHR, “Opening the door to equality: access for justice for Dalits in Nepal” (2011), p. 45.
Nalori Dhammei Chakma, “Equity watch 2015: access to justice for Dalits in India” (Swadhikar and
National Campaign on Dalit Human Rights, 2015), pp. 38-39.
Amnesty International, The State of the World’s Human Rights 2014/15, p. 181.
See CERD/C/IND/CO/19, para. 17.
See A/HRC/30/31, para. 77.
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