From: [email protected]
To: 


PRESS STATEMENT
New Delhi, 5th February 2015
 

India Home Minister Mr. Rajnath Singh orders Delhi police to probe St Alphonsa 
Church desecration as hate crime
Earlier, Nuns, Priest and citizens brutalized in crackdown on peaceful 
protestors in New Delhi

 

The Home Minister of India, Mr. Rajnath Singh, today ordered the Delhi police 
to investigate as a hate crime the desecration earlier this week of the St 
Alphonsa Church in the Vasant Kunj area of South Delhi.

 
Mr. Singh’s assurance of adding relevant sections of the Indian penal Code to 
the probe came in a meeting with Christian leaders in his office after the 
Delhi police had brutalized women, Nuns, men and priests who were protesting 
the government apathy. They had demanded the government of India take urgent 
steps to assure the community of their security following a large number of 
attacks in various parts of the country, peaking during the Christmas reason. 
The National capital territory saw desecration and vandalizing in five Catholic 
churches since 1 December 2014.

Responding to the delegation’s fears that police and administrative apathy was 
encouraging non-state actors in persecuting the community, Mr. Rajnath Singh 
said the government would not discriminate on the basis of relgion, caste or 
community.


The delegation consisted of senior members who were also among those arrested 
in the aggressive police crackdown at the Sacred Heart Cathedral in New Delhi. 
Members of the delegation were  Fr Sebastian Susai, Vicar General, Delhi 
Archdiocese, Dr. John Dayal, Member, NIC, Govt. of India, Past President, All 
India Catholic Union, Mr. Jenis Francis, Advocate, President, FACAAD, Mr. A C 
Michael, Past Member, Delhi Minorities Commission, Mr. Vijayesh Lal, Director, 
Religious Liberty Commission – EFI, Fr Maria Susai, Parish Priest, Sacred Heart 
Cathedral, Fr Dominic Emmanuel, svd, and Mrs. Nisha Samuel. The arrested 
persons were released later in the afternoon. Police Commissioner Mr. Bassi 
also met the delegation later in the evening assuring security for  churches.

The community says it has lost faith in Delhi police which has failed to solve 
the conspiracy that has led to the vandalism, arson and desecration of 
churches. Instead of probing the crimes, the police consistently tried to 
minimize them. Despite detailed complaints, the effort has been to list them as 
minor thefts or short circuits.

The Christian community had come out in large numbers on 2nd December 2014 and 
had marched to the Delhi police headquarters after the St Sebastian Catholic 
Church, in East Delhi’s Dilshad Garden, was gutted in a fire he previous night. 
The police promised a through investigation, but more than two months on, has 
not announced any progress in the case.

The latest incident that shocked the community was the  desecration of the Holy 
Communion by persons who broke into the St. Alphonsa’s Church in Vasant Kunj on 
2nd February 2015. The Parish priest pointed out that the attempt was to 
injured religious feelings of the community as nothing of substance was stolen 
from the church. Three donation boxes and other precious things were left 
untouched. The local police, apparently under orders of the senior officers, 
registered a case of theft.


Community representatives from all localities of the national capital gathered 
at the sacred Heart Cathedral at Gole Dak-khana and marched to the residence of 
Union Home Minister, Mr. Rajnath Singh before they were stopped by the police. 
In a  memorandum to the Home Minister, community representatives  listed the 
five recent attacks in churches:


1. St Sebastian Church, Dilshad Garden [ 1 December 2014]:  The entire inferior 
burnt. Police action was promised. No information on the progress made by Delhi 
police.

2. Syro Malabar Catholic Church, Jasola [3 December 2014] Window smashed by 
rock during Holy Mass services, glass pieces on altar:  Police silent

3.  Church of Resurrection, Rohini, [3 January 2015] Crib with statues burnt to 
ashes. Effort to pass it off as short circuit

4. Our Lady of Grace, Vikaspuri, [14 January, 2015]  Grotto attacked. CCTV  
captures images of vandals. Police arrest three men, claim they did it as a 
drunken prank.

5.  St. Alphonsa’s Church, Vasant Kunj [ 2 February 2015 Church broken into, 
Sacred Host [holy communion] desecrated. Despite detailed complaint, police 
trying to minimize crime as “theft” and “breaking into residential house”

 Elsewhere in the country, the targetted and communal violence continues with 
its vicious hate campaign, physical violence, police complicity, and State 
impunity in the persecution of the Christian community in many states of India. 
Human Rights and Civil Society groups have documented the death of two persons 
in 2014, killed for their Christian faith. The Persecution data lists 149 
cases. An analysis of the data shows Chhattisgarh topping the list with 28 
incidents of crime, followed closely by  neighbouring Madhya Pradesh with 26, 
Uttar Pradesh with  18 and Telengana, a  newly carved out of Andhra Pradesh, 
with  15 incidents. 

Much of the violence has taken place after the new government of the National 
Democratic alliance headed by the Prime Minister, Mr. Narendra Modi, came into 
power on 26 Mary, 2014. The violence peaked between August and October with 56 
cases, before zooming up to 25 cases during the Christmas season. The violence 
has continued well into the New Year 2015, with more Catholic churches in the 
city targetted as incidents continue in other states. Much of the violence,  54 
percent, is of threats, intimidation, coercion, often with the police looking 
on.  The two cases of death in communal anti Christian violence were reported 
from Orissa and Andhra Pradesh.

The memorandum recalled that the President of India, Mr. Pranab Mukherjee, 
noted the rise of communalism and the targetting if religious minorities in his 
address to the Nation on 25th January 2015, the eve of Republic Day. President 
Mukherjee said “In an international environment where so many countries are 
sinking into the morass of theocratic violence … We have always reposed our 
trust in faith-equality where every faith is equal before the law and every 
culture blends into another to create a positive dynamic.  The violence of the 
tongue cuts and wounds people's hearts. The Indian Constitution is the holy 
book of democracy. It is a lodestar for the socio-economic transformation of an 
India whose civilisation has celebrated pluralism, advocated tolerance and 
promoted goodwill between diverse communities. These values, however, need to 
be preserved with utmost care and vigilance.”

 

The memorandum demanded that the government take urgent and effective measures 
to restore the Rule of Law, curb the targetted and communal violence. The 
guilty must be traced, and action under the law should be taken. Police 
officers must be held accountable for communal crimes in their jurisdiction. 
“In Delhi, we demand a Special Investigating team be set up to investigate the 
five  acts of violence against the catholic Churches, monitored by the High 
Court of Delhi,” community leaders said.

------

For more information, please contact:

Fr. Savarimuthu  Sankar  9968006616 [email protected]

Mr. A C Michael  9999940633 [email protected]

Mr. Vijayesh Lal  9810176973 [email protected]

Dr. John Dayal 9811021072  [email protected]

Adv. Jenis Francis: 9811064616 [email protected]

 

 

Text of Memorandum
MEMORANDUM TO MR. RAJNATH SINGH, HOME MINISTER OF INDIA BY THE CHRISTIAN 
COMMUNITY
New Delhi, 5th February 2015

Mr. Rajnath Singh

Union Minister for Home Affairs

Government of India

 

Re: Violence against the Christian community, their churches, institutions, and 
religious men and woman – police inaction and impunity. Demand for Special 
Investigating team under Delhi High Court supervision to probe desecration and 
vandalism in five Delhi churches in two months

Dear Sir,

New Delhi, the National Capital, has seen vandalism and desecration of five 
Catholic churches in just a little over two months. Barring one case, there has 
been no progress in police investigations.

You will recall we had submitted Memorandums to the Prime Minister and to your 
office requesting firm and swift action to curb targetted and communal violence 
against our community in several states since the government took office in May 
2014. There has been no action. In fact, the silence of the government 
leadership and the impunity and inaction by the police and the administration 
has encouraged non-state actors in their activities against religious 
minorities.

We specially call your attention to the incidents in Delhi because they take 
place in sight of the seat of power of the government of India:

6. St Sebastian Church, Dilshad Garden [ 1 December 2014]:  The entire inferior 
burnt. Police action was promised. No information on the progress made by Delhi 
police.

7. Syro Malabar Catholic Church, Jasola [3 December 2014] Window smashed by 
rock during Holy Mass services, glass pieces on altar:  Police silent

8.  Church of Resurrection, Rohini, [3 January 2015] Crib with statues burnt to 
ashes. Effort to pass it off as short circuit

9. Our Lady of Grace, Vikaspuri, [14 January, 2015]  Grotto attacked. CCTV  
captures images of vandals. Police arrest three men, claim they did it as a 
drunken prank.

10.   St. Alphonsa’s Church, Vasant Kunj [ 2 February 2015 Church broken into, 
Sacred Host [holy communion] desecrated. Despite detailed complaint, police 
trying to minimize crime as “theft” and “breaking into residential house”

It is quite clear that the Delhi police has failed to give these crimes the 
attention they deserve, and is trying to trivialize them.

 

Elsewhere in the country, the targetted and communal violence continues with 
its vicious hate campaign, physical violence, police complicity, and State 
impunity in the persecution of the Christian community in many states of India.

Human Rights and Civil Society groups have documented the death of two persons 
in 2014, killed for their Christian faith. The Persecution data lists 149 
cases. An analysis of the data shows Chhattisgarh topping the list with 28 
incidents of crime, followed closely by  neighbouring Madhya Pradesh with 26, 
Uttar Pradesh with  18 and Telengana, a  newly carved out of Andhra Pradesh, 
with  15 incidents. Much of the violence has taken place after the new 
government of the National Democratic alliance headed by the Prime Minister, 
Mr. Narendra Modi, came into power on 26 Mary, 2014. The violence first peaked 
between August and October with 56 cases, before zooming up to 25 cases during 
the Christmas season. The violence has continued well into the New Year 2015, 
with more Catholic churches in the city targetted as incidents continue in 
other states. Much of the violence,  54 percent, is of threats, intimidation, 
coercion, often with the police looking on. Physical violence constituted a 
quarter of all cases, 24 per cent], and violence against Christian women, a 
trend that is increasingly being seen since the carnage in Kandhamal, Odisha, 
in 2007 and 2008,  was 11 per cent. Breaking of statues and the Cross and other 
acts of desecration  were recorded in about 8 per cent of the cases, but many 
more were also consequent to other forms of violence against institutions. A 
disturbing trend was violence against Christians in West Bengal, where though  
one case was formally reported, there have been increasing incidents of hate 
speech and intimidation.

The two cases of death in communal anti Christian violence were reported from 
Orissa and Andhra Pradesh.

Nimmaka Laxmaya, 50, of Vandidi village , Rayagada, (Orissa) was waylaid and 
bludgeoned to death in a planned attack on the afternoon of 25th May 2014 in a 
neighbouring village called Dherubada in Orissa. He was from a neighbouring 
village called Vandidi. He had attended a prayer meeting and the baptism 
ceremony of his nine year old son, and was going home when killers caught up 
with him, strangled him and then smashed his head with a big stone. 

 
The second death was from Andhra Pradesh on 10th January, 2014 Where State 
police arrested seven of the eight members of the Hindu Vahini group accused of 
attacking pastor Orucanti Sanjeevi on Jan. 10 at his home in Vikarabad, 64 
kilometers (39 miles) from the state capital of Hyderabad. Pastor Sanjeevi, 48, 
succumbed to his injuries on Jan. 13. “The key member of this module is 
Gandikota Srinu, alias RK, a full-time member of the Hindu Vahini, and these 
same people attempted to kill another pastor in Narketpally,” the police said. 
The Sangh group had stormed his house, and stabbed him.

 
Police inaction and its failure to arrest the guilty in most cases , its 
propensity to try to minimise the crime, and in rural areas specially, its open 
partisanship has almost become the norm.  Police ineptitude in forensic 
investigations has been seen even in New Delhi where  four of the five cases in 
the months of December 2014 and January 2015 have seen no progress in the 
investigations.  In the one case where there were arrested, the Church and the 
community have  cast doubts on the police version of the motives of the 
suspects whose images were recorded in the Close Circuit TV cameras  installed 
in the church.

The President of India, Mr. Pranab Mukherjee, noted the rise of communalism and 
the targetting if religious minorities in his address to the Nation on 25th 
January 2015, the eve of Republic Day. President Mukherjee said “In an 
international environment where so many countries are sinking into the morass 
of theocratic violence … We have always reposed our trust in faith-equality 
where every faith is equal before the law and every culture blends into another 
to create a positive dynamic.  The violence of the tongue cuts and wounds 
people's hearts. The Indian Constitution is the holy book of democracy. It is a 
lodestar for the socio-economic transformation of an India whose civilisation 
has celebrated pluralism, advocated tolerance and promoted goodwill between 
diverse communities. These values, however, need to be preserved with utmost 
care and vigilance.”


Mr. Mukherjee touched a point that has worried many among even those who voted 
for Mr. Modi hoping he would bring abut a change from the corruption and 
economic coma in which the country had found itself in the last few years.


The Union and State governments have been dismissive of the Christian 
complaints of targetted violence and persecution, both by political non-State 
actors and other elements.

We demand that the government take urgent and effective measures to restore the 
Rule of Law, curb the targetted and communal violence. The guilty must be 
traced, and action under the law should be taken. Police officers must be held 
accountable for communal crimes in their jurisdiction.

In Delhi, we demand a Special Investigating team be set up to investigate the 
five acts of violence against the catholic Churches, monitored by the High 
Court of Delhi

Thank you

Members of the Christian community of the National Capital

1. Fr Sebastian Susai, Vicar General, Delhi Archdiocese

2.  Dr. John Dayal, Member, NIC, Govt. of India, Past President, all India 
Catholic Union

3. Mr. Jenis Francis, Advocate, President, FACAAD

4. Mr. A C Michael, Past Member, Delhi Minorities Commission

5. Mr. Vijayesh Lal, Director, Religious Liberty Commission – EFI

6. Fr Maria Susai, Parish Priest, sacred Heart Cathedral

7. Fr Dominic Emmanuel, svd

 
=========================
Who is fanning the communal fire TV debate with Arnab Goswami‏
http://www.timesnow.tv/videoshow/4473485.cms
 

 

 
                                          

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