CRIMINAL TRIBES
People have been shocked by a
recent report that a 35 year old woman and her 13 year old daughter were
brutally gang raped near Ghaziabad in UP. It now emerges that this gang had
committed similar crimes on this highway earlier. The police now claim that it
is the work of a criminal class of Banwarias living in the area.
Scheduled classes and castes have
great political clout today so it was not surprising that the political
establishment reacted angrily when sociologist Ashis Nandy’s had earlier said
that they were responsible for much of the corruption in India. These scheduled
castes include numerous criminal tribes that had once been well known for
violence, theft and other anti social behavior.
As it is politically incorrect today
to speak of criminal tribes we have almost forgotten that they once existed and
may still form a large though almost invisible social stratum among a number of
overlapping social layers. This might also explain why the system of law and
order is sometimes so out of sync with ground realities and why India’s
politicians and bureaucrats have been incapable of a clear response.
There used to be a Criminal
Tribes Act of 1924 that had listed 313 nomadic and other communities (including
some of the Ahir, Bangars, Bhanjaras, Bawarias, Bhattis, Gujjars, Jats, Lambadis,
Kanjars, Meenas, Sansis, Vagharis, Yadhavs, etc.) Regulating their activities
began with the suppression of Thugees in 1831 and was further elaborated in
1871 when 127 tribes were kept under constant police scrutiny. They were
described as being “so habitually criminal” that their arrests were non
bailable. The British forcibly settled many of these mostly pastoral tribes about
a century ago on virtual wastelands like the areas around Faridabad, Manesar
and Greater Noida where new industries were to later find cheap land but had to
sometimes also face serious violence in their industrial disputes. These tribes
and castes were then estimated to number 60 million or around 16 % of India’s
population making them too large a number to be so ruthlessly suppressed. It is
not a coincidence that many instances of rape and violence including industrial
violence have routinely erupted in most of the areas close to where these
tribes had been forcibly settled.
After independence the criminal
tag was deleted to help them assimilate into India’s mainstream but laws and
rules do not instantly change the social behavior or the habits of people. Vote
bank politics were to also give them considerable political muscle and further
embolden their ambitions. Most Indians may be moral, ethical and religious but
there is also a vicious strata that cannot be wished away.
The social values of many these
communities as well as some of these clans of north India is also a subject that
is seldom discussed. Several social studies have not only shown their tendency
to violence and intoxication but a terrible attitude towards women. While their
mothers and wives were usually held in honor any other woman is still considered
to be open game for exploitation. In many tribal communities marriage by
capture had long been a normal custom and this automatically implied rape. How
can such people be shocked by rape when young brides in some communities were
routinely `deflowered’ by their own fathers-in law or uncles? Why should we then
be surprised that village `khaps’ or panchayat courts should self-righteously uphold
their mediaeval and often gender hostile old customs. Young members may have
had some education but these do not instantly change their social conditioning.
Apart from the molestation of
women a cult of violence seeking instant justice or revenge has unfortunately been
the stuff of many Indian films and TV shows and may have been especially
appealing to socially unsettled people who have long been at the outer fringes
of the law. As they had been virtually ostracized by the richer classes they
also had little compunction about stealing from them or molesting their women. Over
the past few decades India has seen many millions of young villagers move from
rural to urban areas. The lucky few got jobs in the petty bureaucracy,
property, contractors, trade, small businesses, driving taxis, cars, autos, trucks
or buses and in the army or police. The frustrated failures usually drifted
into the criminalized underbelly of every town and indulged in violence, car
thefts, bootlegging and rape whenever opportunity allowed.
As the police, who are supposed
to control them, often come from the same village stock it is not surprising
that they are often unwilling or incapable of opposing their own village
brothers whose social values they share. This problem needs to be recognized
and fully understood before effective measures to solve them can be
contemplated.
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