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June 02, 2007
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Saturday
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Jamadi-ul-Awwal 16, 1428
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Shoot-on-sight orders in Rajasthan: Death toll climbs in ethnic clashes
JODHPUR, June 1: Police in northern India issued shoot-on-sight orders on Friday as eight more people were killed in ethnic clashes that have left 28 dead so far. A protest campaign by the ethnic Gujjar community to demand more government benefits has degenerated into bloodshed and lawlessness, and police said they would act to stop the unrest.
“Anyone seen indulging in arson and rioting will be shot,” local police inspector-general Ajit Singh said.
The unrest in the western state of Rajasthan began on Tuesday at a protest attended by thousands of Gujjars, who are the dominant community in nine of the state's 32 districts but make up only five per cent of the state population.
Tens of thousands of people have been stranded on highways or at railway stations in the western state of Rajasthan, a popular destination for foreign tourists, due to the wave of violent protests by ethnic Gujjars.
Millions of Gujjars, spread across north and western India, want to be declared a Scheduled Tribe (ST) which entitles them to job and college quotas.
But Meenas, who oppose the granting of tribal status to the Gujjars fearing they will lose their own quota slice, clashed on Friday in eastern Rajasthan, officials said. At least four people were killed when Meenas tried to break a blockade by Gujjars, the first sign of a broader caste conflict erupting.
Hundreds of soldiers armed with automatic weapons have been patrolling highways and violence-hit towns. The main highway linking New Delhi to Agra, home to the Taj Mahal, has been hit by the Gujjar protests.
The community, traditionally known for being shepherds and farmers, even took their protests to the outskirts of New Delhi, attacking police vehicles and throwing stones.
In the past two decades, more castes and communities under Hinduism's ancient hierarchy have been demanding special quotas to garner government jobs and college places through affirmative action programmes.
A CASTE PARADOX: The Meenas, a powerful community in Rajasthan, have cornered a large slice of the existing tribal quota for government jobs and college places in the state, and their leaders say they do not want the Gujjars to get reserved places at their cost.
“The strident demand among Gujjars in Rajasthan for ST status is a reflection of the seeming paradox of the notion of caste in today's India,” the Times of India said in an editorial.
“The advent of reservations as an instrument to address economic and social inequities ... has promoted communities to go down the caste ladder to take advantages of assured quotas.”
There are several groups that benefit from government affirmative action -- Scheduled Castes (SC), made up of “untouchables” and which is the lowest tier, and Scheduled Tribes (ST) made up of tribal groups are the next tier.
The third tier are Other Backward Classes (OBC), made up of a host of lower castes including Gujjars.
Gujjars wanted to be relegated to the ST group, where they believe competition is less fierce for jobs and college places.
Talks between Gujjars and state officials have failed and more negotiations are planned.
“We will not lift our blockade unless we get reservation,” a Gujjar protester, holding a big stick, told NDTV television.
In 1990, dozens of upper-caste Hindu students burnt themselves to death to protest against a government plan to widen the quota for lower castes in government jobs.—-AFP/Reuters
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