3. Why is the practice of untouchability in India or Apartheid in South Africa unjust in nature?
Answers
Answer:The international community is no stranger to discrimination that is largely driven by ideological, racial, and social differences. Rooted in long-standing Hindu tradition, India’s caste system is a form of social stratification in Southeast Asia. Despite its longevity, the system is inherently discriminatory and unjust, specifically towards the Dalit people, India’s original inhabitants who gave themselves the name in the 1930s. However, despite banning the practice of “untouchability” in 1950, inequality is still perpetuated in India through the caste system. Even with India’s efforts to slowly stop using the ancient system, the Dalit people specifically suffer immense human rights abuses as a result of the caste system’s hierarchical structure and regressive ideology; these violations include freedom from violence, the right to health, and equal treatment before the law.
Explanation:thank me later
Explanation:
apartheid was an official policy of discrimination based on skin colour followed by the government of South Africa.due to apartheid the rights of the majority of the dark skinned people of South Africa were curtailed. the white skin people enjoyed all the rights and privileges.
untouchability was an extreme form of discrimination where one class of people considerd themselves pure and another class so impure that they could not be even touched.
the discriminatory practice of untouchability has been abolished by law. untouchability was an evil practice,in which some people assume themselves to be the superior class and considered a section of the people untouchables.