India plan to ban religious conversion sparks fears of heightened attacks on Christians
Reuters
Indian
nuns in New Delhi hold a vigil in solidarity with an elderly fellow nun who was
gang-raped by a group of men inside a convent in West Bengal in March this
year.
Lawmakers
in India are planning to introduce a bill that will ban religious conversion,
prompting Christians to express concern that the proposed law will lead to
further attacks and persecution targeting them in the mainly Hindu nation.
The
legislative proposal, ironically called the "Religious Freedom Bill," seeks to
"prohibit conversion from one religion to another by the use of force or
allurement or by fraudulent means."
Indian
parliamentarians plan to define "force" to include the threat of injury
"including threat of divine displeasure."
Under
this definition, the bill will outlaw basic Christian doctrines, such as
salvation, heaven and hell.
India
is the second largest nation in the world, with a population of 1.2 billion next
only to China. Of this number, 80.5 percent are followers of Hinduism.
Christians
maintain a minority presence in India, with only 2.3 percent or 27 million of
the population following the teachings of Jesus Christ.
Paul
Robinson, the chief executive of Release International which supports persecuted
Christians around the world, warned that the anti-conversion bill may make life
more difficult for Christians in India.
"Ultra-nationalists
in India are creating a climate of intolerance that will lead to increased
religious violence," Robinson said, as quoted on the website of Cross
Rhythms.
"This
bill would outlaw evangelism and stir up further violence against India's
religious minorities," he added.
Robinson
further said that the passage of the anti-conversion bill into law will signal
the start of "a dark day for human rights" in India.
The
American Centre for Law and Justice, a politically conservative Christian-based
social activism organisation, meanwhile equated the anti-conversion bill to
"radical Hinduism."
The
group called on Christians around the world to oppose the proposed law.
"Given
the current hostility directed toward Christians in India, we can expect that
passage of a national anti-conversion law will lead to a dramatic increase in
the persecution of Christians. We must heed the warning of Christians on the
ground in India, and oppose the national effort of Hindu extremists to prevent
the spreading of the Christian faith," the organisation said in a statement
posted on its website. Release
Int.