A Dalit man has killed himself in Gujarat in a fresh protest over land, as a campaign for land rights for the low-caste community widened across the country.
Three Dalit men who had been protesting over a lack of land titles in Junagadh in Gujarat had consumed poison earlier this week, a district official said.
Parbat Parmar died in hospital, while the other two are in a stable condition.
In the months since four Dalit youths were stripped and flogged by upper-caste Hindu men in Una, Gujarat, for allegedly skinning a dead cow, protests by Dalits for their rights including land have spread across the country.
Parmar and other Dalits had been forced out of their village more than two decades ago for trying to cultivate grazing land, a move that was opposed by higher-caste villagers.
They have since been demanding alternative land, local media reported.
“What happened is atrocious,” said Paul Divaker, a founder of the National Campaign for Dalit Human Rights in New Delhi.
“It is unconscionable that the state has delayed allotting land to them for so many years, land that is legally due to them, and failing to protect them from harassment,” he said.
At least half of India’s lower-caste population is landless.
Landless Dalits are often vulnerable to discrimination and attacks by upper-caste Hindus, including recent ones by hardline “gau rakshak” vigilantes who regard cows as sacred.
Some Dalits in Junagadh district were allocated land in 1988, said R G Jadeja, another district official.
Others had ancestral land that they cultivated, he said, adding that no allocations had been made since.
The protest ended after officials said they would look into the demands for land, he said.
“We will find out who is eligible to receive land as per government rules, and allot at least two acres per family by March 2017,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Dalit protests that began in Gujarat after the Una incident have since spread elsewhere, with rights activist Jignesh Mevani kicking off a nationwide campaign earlier this month, calling for five acres of land for every landless Dalit family in India.


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