A/HRC/17/40
based discrimination), but notions of impurity and pollution linked to jobs continue to
persist through descent-based discrimination. Therefore, the notion of pollution ascribed
through work is intertwined with caste-based occupations, which include sweeping and
manual scavenging (the cleaning of excreta from dry latrines).
33.
Bonded labour and forced prostitution disproportionately affect those in lower
castes, with a large number of Dalits in South Asia making up the majority of people in
domestic bonded labour. A large number of victims of human trafficking, sexual slavery
and other forms of labour exploitation are members of low castes. Wage discrimination and
discrimination in hiring are prevalent.
2.
Multiple discrimination
34.
Multiple discrimination compounds the severity of the plight of low castes.
Sometimes lower caste societies form part of a religious minority. For instance, in Pakistan
victims of discrimination on the basis of caste, descent and occupation are also
disadvantaged as they are members of the Hindu minority referred to as “scheduled castes”
(Dalits).
35.
Dalits also experience segregation in access to housing; most live below the poverty
line, earn less than the minimum wage and have no access to education. They suffer from
numerous diseases, not least because of lack of access to safe drinking water and sanitation,
and sometimes face discrimination in accessing public-health facilities (A/HRC/15/55 and
Corr. 1, para. 25). Pervasive discrimination keeps them poor, uneducated, in terrible living
conditions and in menial jobs (ibid., para. 26).
36.
Discriminated against in terms of education (CERD/C/IND/CO/19, para. 25),
children of lower castes are among the most vulnerable, facing recruitment as child labour,
soldiers or as sex workers, and rampant torture and corporal punishment. Trafficking (ibid).
and the sale of children, especially young girls, and infanticide of female children are other
multiple forms of discrimination.51
37.
Women and girls face multiple discrimination, including through sexual exploitation
or forced prostitution (A/HRC/7/19 and Corr. 1, para. 71). Women are socio-economically
positioned at the bottom of the caste, gender and class hierarchy, and face violence in their
family and communities, and from actors in other castes.52 Women in Dalit Communities in
Asia are subjected to physical abuse, sexual harassment, trafficking and sexual violence
(E/CN.4/Sub.2/2001/16, para. 45). Violations of land and property rights also affect these
women (A/HRC/10/7/Add.1, para. 52), who suffer disproportionately in terms of health
care, education, and subsistence wages. Dalit women in India and Nepal make up the
majority of landless labourers and scavangers.53
38.
The practice of devadasi (in which girls are pledged for life to temples at an early
age by parents in return for heavenly favours and to placate the gods) continues in India.54
However, once women are ceremonially “dedicated”, they are forced to become prostitutes
for upper-caste community members.55 Recently, most devadasis have ended up working in
the sex trade industry. In some cases, sexual violence is linked to debt bondage.56 In Nepal,
51
52
53
54
55
56
12
CRC/C/15/Add.261, para. 95; CRC/C/15/Add.115, para. 32.
Human Rights Watch, “Caste discrimination: a global concern” (New York, 2001), pp. 20-21.
Ibid., p. 21.
See E/CN.4/2002/73/Add.2, para. 162.
Human Rights Watch, “Caste discrimination”, p. 21.
Ibid.