15.07.2026.News Untouchable.(Voice of Sc.STs,Buddhists,Ambedkar ites,Anti SC.ST atrocity news,Employement news)by Sivaji Ayyayiram.9444917060.asivaji1962@gmail.com.FB.sivaji yoga Tiruvannamalai.x.shivajia479023


ЁЯУ░ Dalit–Adivasi Times
Daily Digital Newspaper
15 July 2026 | English & рд╣िрди्рджी Edition
ЁЯЧЮ️ Front Page
ЁЯЗоЁЯЗ│ National | Madurai Dalit woman case
Five people have been arrested in connection with the alleged gang rape of a Dalit woman in Madurai. A civil society organisation has called for provisions of the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act to be added to the case. The investigation is continuing. �
The Times of India
ЁЯЗоЁЯЗ│ рд░ाрд╖्рдЯ्рд░ीрдп | рдорджुрд░ै рджрд▓िрдд рдорд╣िрд▓ा рдоाрдорд▓ा
рдорджुрд░ै рдоें рджрд▓िрдд рдорд╣िрд▓ा рд╕े рдХрдеिрдд рд╕ाрдоूрд╣िрдХ рджुрд╖्рдХрд░्рдо рдоाрдорд▓े рдоें рдкाँрдЪ рд▓ोрдЧों рдХो рдЧिрд░рдл्рддाрд░ рдХिрдпा рдЧрдпा рд╣ै। рдПрдХ рд╕ाрдоाрдЬिрдХ рд╕ंрдЧрдарди рдиे рдПрд╕рд╕ी/рдПрд╕рдЯी (рдЕрдд्рдпाрдЪाрд░ рдиिрд╡ाрд░рдг) рдЕрдзिрдиिрдпрдо рдХी рдзाрд░ाрдПँ рднी рд▓рдЧाрдиे рдХी рдоाँрдЧ рдХी рд╣ै। рдЬाँрдЪ рдЬाрд░ी рд╣ै। �
The Times of India
ЁЯУШ Dr. B.R. Ambedkar News
English
Ambedkarite organisations and student groups continued programmes promoting constitutional values, equality, fraternity, and social justice through lectures and study circles. �
Wikipedia
рд╣िрди्рджी
рдЖंрдмेрдбрдХрд░рд╡ाрджी рд╕ंрдЧрдардиों рдФрд░ рдЫाрдд्рд░ рд╕рдоूрд╣ों рдиे рд╕ंрд╡िрдзाрди, рд╕рдоाрдирддा, рдмंрдзुрдд्рд╡ рдФрд░ рд╕ाрдоाрдЬिрдХ рди्рдпाрдп рдкрд░ рдЕрдз्рдпрдпрди рдПрд╡ं рдЬाрдЧрд░ूрдХрддा рдХाрд░्рдпрдХ्рд░рдо рдЖрдпोрдЬिрдд рдХिрдП। �
Wikipedia
ЁЯМ┐ Adivasi (ST) News
English
Tribal organisations continued demanding stronger implementation of the Forest Rights Act, protection of tribal land, improved education, and better implementation of welfare schemes.
рд╣िрди्рджी
рдЖрджिрд╡ाрд╕ी рд╕ंрдЧрдардиों рдиे рд╡рди рдЕрдзिрдХाрд░ рдЕрдзिрдиिрдпрдо рдХे рдк्рд░рднाрд╡ी рдХ्рд░िрдпाрди्рд╡рдпрди, рднूрдоि рдЕрдзिрдХाрд░ों рдХी рд╕ुрд░рдХ्рд╖ा рддрдеा рд╢िрдХ्рд╖ा рдПрд╡ं рдХрд▓्рдпाрдг рдпोрдЬрдиाрдУं рдХे рдмेрд╣рддрд░ рдХाрд░्рдпाрди्рд╡рдпрди рдХी рдоाँрдЧ рджोрд╣рд░ाрдИ।
☸ Buddhist News
English
Ambedkarite Buddhist organisations continued Dhamma classes and community programmes promoting equality, compassion, and constitutional values inspired by Dr. Ambedkar. �
Wikipedia +1
рд╣िрди्рджी
рдЖंрдмेрдбрдХрд░рд╡ाрджी рдмौрдж्рдз рд╕ंрдЧрдардиों рдиे рдзрдо्рдо, рд╕рдоाрдирддा рдФрд░ рд╕ाрдоाрдЬिрдХ рди्рдпाрдп рдкрд░ рдЖрдзाрд░िрдд рдХाрд░्рдпрдХ्рд░рдо рдЬाрд░ी рд░рдЦे। �
Wikipedia +1
ЁЯПЫ️ Reservation News
English
Discussions on reservation policy and constitutional safeguards for Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes continued among political parties, legal experts, and social organisations. �
Wikipedia
рд╣िрди्рджी
рдЕрдиुрд╕ूрдЪिрдд рдЬाрддि рдПрд╡ं рдЕрдиुрд╕ूрдЪिрдд рдЬрдирдЬाрддि рдХे рд▓िрдП рдЖрд░рдХ्рд╖рдг рдФрд░ рд╕ंрд╡ैрдзाрдиिрдХ рд╕ुрд░рдХ्рд╖ा рдЙрдкाрдпों рдкрд░ рдЪрд░्рдЪा рдЬाрд░ी рд░рд╣ी। �
Wikipedia
ЁЯЪи Atrocity & Anti-Untouchability Watch
English
Rights organisations continued to call for strict enforcement of the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act and stronger action against caste discrimination and untouchability. �
Wikipedia
рд╣िрди्рджी
рд╕ाрдоाрдЬिрдХ рд╕ंрдЧрдардиों рдиे рдПрд╕рд╕ी/рдПрд╕рдЯी рдЕрдд्рдпाрдЪाрд░ рдиिрд╡ाрд░рдг рдЕрдзिрдиिрдпрдо рдХे рдк्рд░рднाрд╡ी рдХ्рд░िрдпाрди्рд╡рдпрди рддрдеा рдЕрд╕्рдкृрд╢्рдпрддा рдХे рд╡िрд░ुрдж्рдз рдХрдб़ी рдХाрд░्рд░рд╡ाрдИ рдХी рдоाँрдЧ рджोрд╣рд░ाрдИ। �
Wikipedia
ЁЯУН State Highlights
Tamil Nadu: Madurai Dalit woman case investigation continued. �
The Times of India
Maharashtra: Ambedkarite and Buddhist organisations continued educational activities. �
Wikipedia
Telangana: Ambedkar Students' Association and similar groups continued programmes on social justice and constitutional awareness. �
Wikipedia
Andhra Pradesh: Civil society organisations continued discussions on SC/ST rights and constitutional protections. �
Wikipedia
ЁЯОУ Education & Scholarships
English
Students are advised to watch official state scholarship portals for Post-Matric Scholarship notifications and SC/ST hostel admissions.
рд╣िрди्рджी
рд╡िрдж्рдпाрд░्рдеिрдпों рдХो рдкोрд╕्рдЯ-рдоैрдЯ्рд░िрдХ рдЫाрдд्рд░рд╡ृрдд्рддि рддрдеा рдПрд╕рд╕ी/рдПрд╕рдЯी рдЫाрдд्рд░ाрд╡ाрд╕ рдк्рд░рд╡ेрд╢ рд╕ंрдмंрдзी рдирд╡ीрдирддрдо рд╕рд░рдХाрд░ी рд╕ूрдЪрдиाрдУं рдкрд░ рдирдЬ़рд░ рд░рдЦрдиे рдХी рд╕рд▓ाрд╣ рджी рдЬाрддी рд╣ै।
✍️ Editorial
English
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar envisioned a society based on Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity. Current debates on reservation, anti-discrimination laws, and equal opportunity continue to reflect the importance of these constitutional ideals. �
Wikipedia +1
рд╣िрди्рджी
рдбॉ. рднीрдорд░ाрд╡ рдЖंрдмेрдбрдХрд░ рдиे рд╕्рд╡рддंрдд्рд░рддा, рд╕рдоाрдирддा рдФрд░ рдмंрдзुрдд्рд╡ рдкрд░ рдЖрдзाрд░िрдд рд╕рдоाрдЬ рдХी рдХрд▓्рдкрдиा рдХी рдеी। рдЖрдЬ рдЖрд░рдХ्рд╖рдг, рд╕ाрдоाрдЬिрдХ рди्рдпाрдп рдФрд░ рд╕рдоाрди рдЕрд╡рд╕рд░ рд╕े рдЬुрдб़ी рдЪрд░्рдЪाрдПँ рдЙрди्рд╣ीं рд╕ंрд╡ैрдзाрдиिрдХ рдЖрджрд░्рд╢ों рдХो рдЖрдЧे рдмрдв़ाрддी рд╣ैं। �
Wikipedia +1

The road to the Dalit settlement in Gorakhpur is dilapidated and muddy: Villagers face difficulties commuting, demanding repairs from the administration.

The road leading to the Dalit settlement in Mainabhagar Gram Panchayat, in the Jungle Kaudiya development block of Gorakhpur, is extremely dilapidated and muddy. Local villagers allege that the condition of this road has been poor for a long time, causing significant difficulties in commuting.

According to villagers, children, women, elderly people, and other villagers travel this route daily. The situation becomes even worse during the rainy season, as the entire route is waterlogged and muddy.

Local residents reported that while other roads in the village are in good condition, the road to the Dalit settlement has not been repaired. Consequently, schoolchildren face particular difficulties commuting to and from school.

Villagers say they have lodged complaints several times in this regard, but no action has been taken yet. They have demanded that the administration and public representatives resolve the transportation problem by constructing the road as soon as possible. 

SouthAsians & Diaspora

Sugreev Kumar Yadav | Bhauramal (Gorakhpur Sadar), Gorakhpur



Dalit woman sarpanch alleges harassment, seeks arrest of accused

Rohtak: A woman sarpanch of Mokhra Khas village on Monday gave a representation to the Rohtak superintendent of police (SP), seeking the immediate arrest of two accused named in a case under the Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act. She also sought permission to hold a peaceful dharna if no action is taken.

In her representation dated July 13, sarpanch Manjubala stated that she belongs to the SC community, and became a permanent resident of Mokhra Khas after her marriage. She stated that she was elected as the village sarpanch in the 2022 panchayat elections from a general seat reserved for women, defeating her nearest rival by 32 votes. She added that all other candidates in the election belonged to the general category.

The representation alleges that two villagers, identified as Rajnesh alias Dola and Manoj alias Bandu, have been hostile towards her and her family. Referring to an FIR registered in May 2026 under the SC/ST Act at Bahuakbarpur police station, Manjubala alleged that despite registration of the case, the accused have not been arrested so far. 

Family

She claimed that the delay in arrest has created fear for the safety of her family. In the representation, she stated that if timely action is not taken, the accused may pose a threat to their lives, forcing them to leave the village. She also said she already met senior police officials twice regarding the matter, but no effective action has been taken.

Speaking to TOI, Manjubala said she enjoys support from people of all communities in the village, but alleged that the two accused made caste-based and defamatory remarks against her. Meham DSP Tanuj Sharma confirmed that the representation has been received.

Courtesy : TOI

Four Dalits Flogged, One Movement Born, Zero Structural Fixes — Did Una Just Teach India How to Forget?

MANOJ KUMAR N

Ten years after the Una flogging shocked India, the father of two victims still demands justice, Jignesh Mevani's movement has largely dissipated, cow-vigilantism cases continue, and no structural reform — legislative or institutional — has been enacted to prevent a recurrence, according to The Indian Express.

A video. That is all it took. In July 2016, a phone camera in the dusty town of Una, Gujarat, captured something India could not unsee — four Dalit men, tied to an SUV, stripped to the waist, beaten with iron rods by a mob of self-appointed cow protectors, their crime nothing more than doing the work their caste had assigned them for centuries: skinning a dead cow. The footage went viral. India erupted. And for a brief, searing moment, the country was forced to confront a question it preferred to keep buried: who, exactly, does cow protection protect?

Ten years later, Balu Sarvaiya — the father of two of those four men — has given The Indian Express an answer that doubles as an indictment. "Will fight till we are alive," he says. Not "we won." Not "justice was served." Not even "things are better." Just: we will fight. The verb is still in the future tense. That tense tells you everything about what Una changed — and what it did not.

The Crack in the Fortress

To understand Una's real significance, you have to remember what Gujarat was in 2016: the BJP's laboratory, its unbreakable fortress, the state Narendra Modi had governed for over a decade before becoming Prime Minister. Gujarat was supposed to be the model — development, stability, a Hindu consolidation so thorough that caste fissures simply did not matter. Una shattered that myth in broad daylight, on camera, with iron rods.

Mevani himself won the Vadgam seat as an independent, backed by Congress, becoming the face of a new Dalit assertion that seemed to transcend the old patronage politics. National media crowned him the next big thing. Commentators drew parallels to the Ambedkarite resurgence. The future, briefly, looked different.

Political Pulse

Here is the part no press release will tell you. In political corridors — in Delhi, in Gandhinagar, in the back offices where elections are actually won — the quiet consensus a decade later is brutal: Una was a crisis management exercise, not a structural reckoning. The BJP absorbed the blow, recalibrated its messaging, deployed targeted welfare schemes for Dalits, and by 2022, won Gujarat with 156 seats — its highest ever. The party did not dismantle the cow-vigilante ecosystem; it simply put distance between itself and the most visible excesses while leaving the underlying impunity architecture intact.

The talk in political circles, safely attributed to those who track caste politics closely, is that the BJP learned from Una not the lesson the protesters intended — that vigilantism must be structurally dismantled — but a tactical one: that the optics of caste violence are electorally dangerous and must be managed, not the violence itself. Cow protection laws across BJP-ruled states have, if anything, grown stricter since 2016, according to analysis by the India Today Data Intelligence Unit. What changed is not the policy but the public-relations discipline around it.

Mevani's trajectory tells the other half of the story. The firebrand who won Vadgam in 2017 joined the Congress formally, won again in 2022, but has struggled to build a movement beyond his constituency. He has been arrested multiple times — including, as reported by NDTV, on charges that rights organisations have called politically motivated. The energy that Una unleashed has not disappeared, but it has been atomised, scattered across courtrooms and social media threads rather than concentrated into the kind of institutional force that rewrites law.

The Numbers That Haunt

Consider the data that frames Balu Sarvaiya's fight. According to an analysis published by IndiaSpend based on National Crime Records Bureau data, crimes against Dalits rose by over 25 percent between 2016 and the most recent available figures. Cow-vigilantism-related violence, tracked independently by organisations such as the Documentation of the Oppressed, has not abated; if anything, it has become more dispersed and less spectacular — which means less viral, less politically costly, and therefore less likely to trigger the kind of national convulsion Una did.

No central legislation specifically criminalising mob violence or vigilantism has been enacted in the decade since Una. The Supreme Court's 2018 directive to states — to appoint nodal officers and take preventive measures against mob lynching, as reported by LiveLaw — has seen patchy compliance at best. Several states have not even appointed the officers. The structural plumbing that would prevent another Una remains unbuilt.

What India Herald Reads Between the Lines

India Herald's assessment, built on this decade of evidence, is that Una exposed a fundamental tension the Indian political system has no incentive to resolve. Cow protection is too potent a mobilisation tool for any party invested in Hindu consolidation to dismantle its vigilante fringe — the cost of doing so, in terms of base enthusiasm, exceeds the cost of the occasional viral atrocity. And Dalit assertion, however fierce in the moment, lacks the sustained institutional infrastructure — a dedicated political party with pan-state reach, a legal-aid ecosystem, a media apparatus — to convert episodic outrage into permanent structural change.

The result is a grim equilibrium: the outrage cycle runs its course, the political system absorbs the shock, recalibrates its messaging, and waits. Balu Sarvaiya's "will fight till we are alive" is not just a personal vow — it is an inadvertent description of the system's strategy. It is banking on the fact that individuals tire before institutions do.

What to watch next: the trajectory of cow-protection legislation in election-bound states, and whether any national party — including the Congress, which has Mevani in its ranks — will risk introducing a dedicated anti-lynching bill in Parliament. If neither happens in the next electoral cycle, Una's legacy will be sealed — not as a turning point, but as a pressure valve. The system did not learn from Una. It learned to outwait it.

Allegations reported here are attributed to named sources and remain unproven unless a court has ruled; matters sub judice are reported without prejudgment.

Reported and written with AI assistance under India Herald's editorial standards; a human editor governs publication.

More from India Herald

Key Takeaways

  • Ten years after the Una flogging, father Balu Sarvaiya tells The Indian Express he will fight till he is alive — justice remains incomplete and no structural anti-vigilantism law exists.
  • The 2016 Una incident cracked BJP's Gujarat fortress, contributing to a historically low 99-seat tally in 2017, but the party recovered to a record 156 seats by 2022 without dismantling the cow-vigilante ecosystem.
  • Jignesh Mevani, the Dalit leader Una's outrage birthed, joined Congress and won re-election but has not built a pan-state institutional movement — his repeated arrests have drawn criticism from rights groups.
  • Crimes against Dalits rose over 25 percent nationally since 2016 per NCRB data analysed by IndiaSpend, and the Supreme Court's 2018 anti-lynching directives have seen patchy compliance across states.
  • India Herald's forward read: unless a dedicated anti-lynching bill enters Parliament in the next electoral cycle, Una's legacy risks being sealed as a pressure valve, not a turning point.

By the Numbers

  • BJP won just 99 seats in the 2017 Gujarat Assembly elections — its lowest in over two decades — before surging to a record 156 seats in 2022, according to Election Commission of India data.
  • Crimes against Dalits rose by over 25 percent between 2016 and the latest available NCRB figures, per IndiaSpend analysis.
  • The Supreme Court's 2018 directive to states to appoint nodal officers against mob lynching has seen incomplete compliance a decade later, as reported by LiveLaw.

The 5W+H: Who, What, When, Where, Why, How

  • Who: Balu Sarvaiya, father of two of the four Dalit men publicly flogged in Una, Gujarat, and the broader Dalit community seeking justice, according to The Indian Express.
  • What: Ten years after four Dalit men were stripped and beaten by cow vigilantes in Una for skinning a dead cow, the father vows to fight on while systemic reforms remain absent, as reported by The Indian Express.
  • When: The flogging took place in July 2016; the tenth anniversary is being marked in July 2026.
  • Where: Una town, Gir Somnath district, Gujarat, India.
  • Why: The victims were attacked by self-styled cow protection vigilantes who accused them of cow slaughter; the deeper cause lies in caste-based violence and the impunity enjoyed by vigilante groups operating under ideological cover, according to The Indian Express.
  • How: The four Dalit men, engaged in their traditional occupation of skinning a dead cow, were tied to a vehicle, stripped, and publicly flogged with rods by vigilantes; the assault was filmed and circulated on social media, triggering nationwide outrage, as reported by The Indian Express.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happened in the 2016 Una flogging incident?

In July 2016, four Dalit men in Una, Gujarat, were publicly stripped and beaten with iron rods by self-styled cow protection vigilantes for skinning a dead cow — their traditional occupation. The assault was filmed and went viral, triggering nationwide outrage, according to The Indian Express.

What political impact did the Una flogging have on BJP in Gujarat?

The Una incident and subsequent Dalit protests contributed to the BJP winning only 99 seats in the 2017 Gujarat Assembly elections — its lowest tally in over two decades. However, the party recovered to win a record 156 seats in 2022, according to Election Commission data.

Has any anti-lynching law been passed in India since Una?

No central legislation specifically criminalising mob violence or vigilantism has been enacted. The Supreme Court issued directives in 2018 for preventive measures, but compliance across states has been patchy, as reported by LiveLaw.

Where is Jignesh Mevani now?

Jignesh Mevani, the Dalit leader who rose to prominence after Una, formally joined Congress, won re-election from Vadgam in 2022, but has faced multiple arrests that rights organisations have called politically motivated, according to NDTV reporting.


Ballia Dalit Labourer Dies After Police Questioning; Murder Case Registered Against Two Policemen, Village Head and Three Others

Ballia Dalit Labourer Dies After Police Questioning; Murder Case Registered Against Two Policemen, Village Head and Three Others
---Advertisement---

A 44-year-old Dalit labourer died after being taken by police for questioning in Uttar Pradesh’s Ballia district, prompting authorities to register a murder case against two police personnel, a village head and three others.

The case was registered at the Revati police station on the complaint of the victim’s son, Vishal Gond. The accused include Sub-Inspector Sachin Saroj, Constable Ankit Singh, village head Ashutosh Shankar Singh and three local residents. No arrests have been made so far.

Family Alleges Custodial Assault

The victim’s family alleged that Kamji Gond was picked up by police on July 8 to reveal the whereabouts of his 22-year-old son, Vishal Gond, who is an accused in an assault case.

According to Vishal, the police arrived at their home after he was unavailable and took away his father, who was asleep. He alleged that Kamji was taken to a nearby brick kiln, where he was assaulted to force him to disclose his son’s location and persuade him to surrender.

The family further claimed that after Kamji lost consciousness, he was abandoned in a nearby field. Local residents later found him unconscious and informed the family, who rushed him to the hospital. He was referred to a hospital in Varanasi, where he died during treatment.

The family has also alleged that police ignored an earlier complaint related to the dispute that led to the questioning.

Police Deny Assault Allegations

Police have denied the allegations of custodial assault.

According to the Ballia police, Kamji experienced breathing difficulties during questioning. Officers said he was released at around 4 pm on July 8 and handed over to a local resident, who took him home.

Police maintain that there was no assault or abandonment.

The post-mortem examination did not establish the exact cause of death. Doctors have preserved viscera samples for forensic examination, and the final cause of death will depend on the forensic report.

Policemen Suspended, Inquiry Ordered

Ballia Superintendent of Police Omvir Singh said the two police personnel involved in questioning Kamji have been suspended.

The Station House Officer of Revati police station has also been removed from his post pending further inquiry.

A magisterial inquiry has been ordered to examine the circumstances surrounding the labourer’s death.

Protest Over Death

Background of the Dispute

According to Vishal Gond, the events began on July 7 following an altercation with a local shopkeeper over a purchase. He alleged that the complaint against him was filed under pressure from the village head and local residents.

Police, however, stated that Vishal is an accused in the assault case and has previously been booked in several criminal cases, including murder.

The investigation is continuing, with the forensic report and findings of the magisterial inquiry expected to play a key role in determining the circumstances of Kamji Gond’s death.



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

17.12.2025.REMOVAL OF CREAMY LAYER IN SC.STs.RESERVATIONS. Former.CJI.GAVAI...by UT News.

Sivaji's...UT NEWS.chennai.26.Reserved/Untouchable Ministers of Indian STATES.by Sivaji.A.CEO.UT news.

родрооிро┤роХроо் роПрой் SC.ST рооுродро▓்ро╡ро░ைропோ, родுрогை рооுродро▓்ро╡ро░ைропோ роЙро░ுро╡ாроХ்роХро╡ிро▓்ро▓ை? ASivaji.UTN рооூро▓роо். Why Tamilnadu did not produce a SC.ST CM or Dy.CM ? by ASivaji.UTN.