By Ramphal Kataria
Of over 25,000 inmates in
Haryana’s jails, nearly 28% are Scheduled Castes (SCs) and 13% are Muslims —
both far higher than their share in the state’s population (20.2% SCs and 7%
Muslims, as per the Census of India 2011).
According to the National
Crime Records Bureau’s Prison Statistics India 2022, Haryana’s proportion of SC
and Muslim prisoners is among the highest in northern India, rising steadily
over the past decade.
This is not about
“criminality.” It is about criminalisation — the outcome of caste hierarchy,
political prejudice, and systemic neglect that have turned Haryana’s prisons
into a mirror of its social order.
The Caste Pyramid in Chains
Caste in Haryana is not a
relic — it is a living architecture. As sociologist Surinder Jodhka noted in
EPW (“Caste and Power in Haryana’s Rural Landscape”), the state’s agrarian
economy is built upon Jat dominance, with Dalits largely confined to kamins —
low-wage, dependent labour roles.
Despite constitutional
guarantees, village life remains ruled by the khap and the panchayat, not the
Constitution.
When Dalits resist,
violence enforces “order.” The 2010 Mirchpur massacre is the most haunting
reminder — when a Jat mob burnt alive a 70-year-old Dalit man and his disabled
daughter, torching 18 Dalit homes. Over 250 families fled (PUDR Report:
Mirchpur – Justice Denied).
In Bhagana (Hisar, 2014),
after Dalits protested encroachment on common land, 138 families were expelled;
four Dalit girls were later gang-raped (Indian Express, 2014).
Such atrocities are not
isolated; they are the grammar of caste discipline. Whether in Pabnava (Kaithal,
2013) — where 200 Dalit homes were destroyed after an inter-caste marriage — or
Jandwala Sotar (Fatehabad, 2023), where a panchayat ordered Dalits to vacate
their homes (The Wire, 2023), the pattern is identical: assertion meets
annihilation.
A Justice System that Mirrors the
Social Order
In Haryana, law
enforcement is not neutral — it is an extension of caste power. Data from the
Status of Policing in India Report 2022, by Common Cause and Lokniti-CSDS,
reveal deep bias: nearly one in three police personnel believes that
“complaints by Dalits and Muslims are often false.” Within this structure, it
is not surprising that SCs form 27.8% of undertrials and Muslims about 9%,
despite their smaller population shares (NCRB 2022).
As Ambala MP Varun
Chaudhary told The Indian Express, “These figures are not just data points;
they reflect institutional prejudice. The state must ensure proper legal aid
for the poor.”
Yet, Haryana’s budget
allocations for legal aid and prison reforms remain negligible. Access to legal
counsel for poor inmates is often theoretical, and caste determines who
receives “sympathetic hearing.”
Inside prisons, according
to IndiaSpend’s 2023 analysis, discrimination continues — from segregated
barracks to unequal work assignments. The bars do not erase caste; they
reinforce it.
The Political Arithmetic of Caste and
Crime
Caste is not just a
social order in Haryana — it is a political currency. Since 2014, the BJP has
marketed itself as a “Non-Jat” party, drawing support from SCs, OBCs and
minorities alienated by Jat dominance. But as the Economic & Political
Weekly analysis by Pritam Singh shows, this coalition has only rearranged
hierarchy, not dismantled it.
Behind the slogans of
empowerment lies a pattern of selective prosecution and protection.
Cow protection laws, for
instance, have become a tool of targeted criminalisation of Muslims, as
reported by The Caravan in “The Politics of Caste and Cow in Haryana.”
Meanwhile, caste-based violence against Dalits rarely sees convictions — a
reflection of both police bias and political convenience.
The BJP’s electoral
narrative thrives on horizontal stratification — pitching communities against
each other. Old footage from the 2016 Jat reservation protests was revived
during the 2024 campaign to stoke anti-Jat sentiment among SCs and OBCs.
This fragmentation
ensures that the oppressed remain electorally useful but structurally
powerless.
Policing as Caste Discipline
The Indian Police
Foundation’s 2023 Dashboard shows that Haryana’s police force remains over 75%
dominated by upper-caste groups, with Dalits grossly underrepresented in
officer ranks.
As the Centre for Dalit
Studies (2020) found, this lack of diversity translates directly into biased
policing patterns — from filing of FIRs to custodial treatment.
In practice, dominant
caste offenders are often shielded, while Dalit and Muslim youth face false
charges — theft, “cow smuggling,” or “rioting.”
Reports by Sabrang India
and Human Rights Watch document dozens of cases in which Dalit assertion was
rebranded as crime.
This is how “law and
order” becomes a euphemism for the preservation of social hierarchy.
The Social Economy of Exclusion
The heart of Haryana’s caste
crisis lies in land and livelihood. SCs and Muslims remain concentrated in
informal labour, sanitation, and service sectors — low-wage, insecure, and
dependent on upper-caste employers. Land ownership, panchayat control, and
cooperative power are still monopolised by dominant castes.
As detailed in Sukhadeo
Thorat and Katherine Newman’s Blocked by Caste (OUP, 2012), economic exclusion
is the root of social servitude. In Haryana, denial of land translates into
denial of dignity — and every assertion of equality invites collective
punishment.
Even the UN Human Rights
Council (2019) recognised caste as a “form of discrimination based on work and
descent,” equating it to a human rights violation (OHCHR Report). Yet,
Haryana’s state machinery remains largely indifferent.
Justice for Whom?
The Supreme Court
judgment in State of Haryana v. Ram Mehar & Ors. (2018) — the Mirchpur case
— itself acknowledged “institutional failure and caste prejudice” in
investigation and prosecution.
But despite judicial
acknowledgment, systemic reform has been cosmetic.
Editorials in The Hindu
and human rights reports have repeatedly warned of the collapse of law in
Haryana’s villages — where caste panchayats issue diktats and the police
quietly comply.
The state’s political
leadership, instead of confronting this feudal mindset, often feeds off it
electorally.
The Arithmetic of Oppression
The overrepresentation of
Dalits and Muslims in Haryana’s jails is not an accident — it is the
statistical face of social apartheid. It tells us who gets arrested, who gets
convicted, and who is protected.
As the National Dalit
Movement for Justice (2023) notes, the cycle of violence and impunity continues
because the state itself is structured by caste — from police stations to
courtrooms to cabinet tables.
If Haryana seeks real
justice, it must start by decolonising its institutions from caste control —
ensuring diversity in police, accountability in prosecutions, and universal
access to legal aid.
But that demands
political will — something Haryana’s rulers have so far lacked.
Until then, its prisons
will remain the caste system in miniature: a place where the poor, the Dalit,
and the Muslim are punished not for their crimes, but for their place in
society.
References
1.
Prison Statistics India 2022 – National
Crime Records Bureau, Ministry of Home Affairs. Data on religion- and
caste-wise composition of convicts and undertrials in Haryana.
2.
Census of India 2011 – Registrar General
of India. Scheduled Castes form 20.2 % and Muslims 7 % of Haryana’s population.
3.
The Indian Express, August 2024– Ambala MP
Varun Chaudhary’s remarks on overrepresentation of SCs and Muslims in Haryana’s
jails and the urgent need for state-funded legal aid.
4.
State of Dalit Rights in India 2023 Report
– National Dalit Movement for Justice (NDMJ) / National Campaign on Dalit Human
Rights (NCDHR). Documents Mirchpur, Bhagana and Pabnava atrocities in Haryana.
5.
PUDR Report: Mirchpur – Justice Denied
(2012) – People’s Union for Democratic Rights. Ground investigation of the 2010
caste massacre in Hisar district.
6.
Indian Express (2014) – “Four Dalit Girls
Raped in Bhagana, Haryana; Families Driven Out.” On the continuing violence and
displacement of Dalit families.
7.
Human Rights Watch (2007) – Hidden
Apartheid: Caste Discrimination against India’s Untouchables. Foundational
global report on caste bias within Indian institutions.
8.
Economic & Political Weekly –
Surinder
S. Jodhka, “Caste and Power in Haryana’s Rural Landscape” (2014).
Pritam
Singh, “Caste, Class and Political Economy in Northern India” (2017).
Analyses
of horizontal caste stratification and agrarian power structures.
9.
The Wire (2023) – “In Haryana’s Villages,
Dalits Still Face Boycott, Beatings and Forced Evictions.” Field reportage from
Jandwala Sotar and other villages.
10.
IndiaSpend (2023)– “How India’s Prisons
Mirror Its Social Inequalities.” Data-driven look at caste-religion
representation across Indian prisons.
11.
Status of Policing in India Report 2022 –
Common Cause & Lokniti-CSDS. Quantitative evidence of caste and communal
bias within police attitudes in Haryana.
12.
Supreme Court of India: State of Haryana
v. Ram Mehar & Ors. (2018) – The Mirchpur case judgment noting
institutional lapses and caste prejudice in investigation and trial.
13.
The Hindu (2023) – Editorial, “Caste
Conflict and the Collapse of Law in Haryana’s Villages.” On the nexus between
caste panchayats and state inaction.
14.
Centre for Dalit Studies Working Paper
(2020)– Caste, Politics and Policing in North India. Data on horizontal
stratification and representation in law enforcement.
15.
Sukhadeo Thorat & Katherine Newman
(eds.), Blocked by Caste (Oxford University Press, 2012) – Landmark study
connecting caste exclusion with access to justice and economic opportunity.
16.
UN OHCHR Report (2019) – Discrimination
Based on Work and Descent in South Asia. International framing of caste as a
human-rights violation.
17.
Sabrang India (2022) – “How Dalit
Assertion Is Criminalised in Haryana.” Documentation of false cases and
custodial bias against Dalit activists.
18.
Indian Police Foundation Dashboard (2023)
– Police Diversity and Representation in India. Data showing caste imbalance in
Haryana’s police force.
19.
The Caravan (2022)– “The Politics of Caste
and Cow in Haryana.” On the criminalisation of Muslims under cow-protection
laws and its electoral calculus.
20. PRS
Legislative Research (2024–25) – Haryana Budget: Home & Prison Departments.
Financial data on legal-aid spending and prison administration.
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