Had Babasaheb Ambedkar lived in London today, he might have reconsidered his saying “my five years of staying in Europe and America had completely wiped out of my mind any consciousness that I was an untouchable, and that an untouchable wherever he went in India was a problem to himself and to others.” According to Santosh Dass, president of the Federation of Ambedkarite and Buddhist Organisations, UK, “the key thing” was that Ambedkar “was spared from the perniciousness of untouchability in London.” He might not have been today, if some British peers are to be believed.