
NEW DEHLI (UCAN): Prominent Indian citizens, including Christians, have demanded a repeal of all the country’s anti-conversion laws even as the southern state of Karnataka prepared to set the seal on its own law to prevent religious conversions.
“Wherever the anti-conversion law, ironically officially called the Freedom of Religion Act, was passed, it became a justification for the persecution of minorities and other marginalized identities,” said the petition initiated by the National Solidarity Forum [NSF], a network of groups and individuals formed in response to the anti-Christian Kandhamal riots in 2007 to 2008.
“The attacks on minorities grew sharply in recent years since this law was used as a weapon targeting the dignity of Christians and Muslims, particularly belonging to Dalits, Adivasis and women,” added the petition, which was addressed to Indian president, Ram Nath Kovind.
The signatories included Margaret Alva, former governor of Goa, Gujarat and Uttarakhand; Admiral L. Ramdas, former chief of the Indian navy; Mallika Sarabhai, danseuse and choreographer; Medha Patkar, social activist; Mani Shankar Aiyar, a Congress leader; and Archbishop Peter Machado of Bangalore.
The petition called for the joining hands to defend the values enshrined in the Indian constitution and protection of human rights of minorities and other marginalised sections in India.
The law disrespects women and places restrictions for a woman to choose her partner. It is conceived with a notion that women in India are not in a position to think on their own and act on their own. This law is highly patriarchal. It is not acceptable
Vidya Dinkar
NSF convener and social activist, Ram Punyani, said there have been scattered and sporadic attacks on Christians across India under the pretext of alleged religious conversions by force, fraud, coercion or allurement even though the census shows a decline in the percentage of Christians from 2.6 per cent in 1971 to 2.3 per cent in 2011.
Punyani said that the anti-conversion laws are an attempt to intimidate the Christian community.
Alva appealed to the NSF to intensify efforts to dissuade the Karnataka government from passing its anti-conversion bill. “I request you to sign this appeal to withdraw the anti-Christian bill and such laws in other states of the country,” she urged Indians of all hues.
John Dayal, a human rights activist and a founding member of the NSF, said anti-conversion laws were not only affecting Christians but were also meant to further persecute Muslims, Dalits, Adivasis and women.
The law was “meant to strengthen religious conflicts and majoritarian nationalism in India. Moreover, it infantilises the poor and gives the state power over matters that are deeply personal,” Brinnelle D’Souza, a health expert, said.
“The law disrespects women and places restrictions for a woman to choose her partner. It is conceived with a notion that women in India are not in a position to think on their own and act on their own. This law is highly patriarchal. It is not acceptable,” Vidya Dinkar, a human rights activist and a core team member of NSF, said.
The Karnataka bill makes religious conversion a non-bailable and cognisable offense, with provisions for imprisonment between three to 10 years and fines up to 50,000 rupees [$5,160].
Similar laws have been enacted or proposed in other Indian states like Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh and Himachal Pradesh, all governed by the pro-Hindu Bharatiya Janata Party, which also rules in Karnataka.
Christians make up 1.87 per cent of Karnataka’s population of 68.4 million.