Manas Dasgupta
Ahmedabad, May 12
Dalits at Lhor village in Kadi taluka in Mehsana district continue to suffer social boycott even two days after Deputy Chief Minister Nitin Patel had intervened to broker peace between the Dalits and upper castes in this north Gujarat village.
A Dalit activist, Chirag Solanki, said Patel’s appeal had gone unheeded in his own hometown (Nitin Patel hails from Kadi) and the Dalits were not been able to acquire even daily essentials from the shops run by the upper castes.
The reason for the social boycott was that a Dalit groom, 24-year-old Mehul Parmar, had ridden a horse in his marriage procession. Horse riding during marriage is generally associated with the upper castes.
Soon after the marriage on May 7, the village panchayat controlled by the upper castes banned any relations with the Dalits. It imposed a fine of Rs 5,000 on anyone who dared to sell groceries to the Dalits, employ them in their fields or even talk to any member of the Dalit community.
On being informed about the situation in the village which falls in his Assembly constituency, Nitin Patel rushed to Lhor and convened a meeting of leaders of both the communities in the presence of senior police officers of the region and brokered peace between them. But after the Deputy Chief Minister left, the upper castes refused to lift the social boycott.
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