http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?m=1121995494181&ca=a991d1ac-6b6d-40cf-b96e-27ae2dba5552

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Religious minorities in India continue to live under the threat of physical 
violence, state harassment and repressive laws that severely curb Freedom 
of Religion and Belief though the country is a signatory to United Nations 
and other international declarations, covenants, and treaties on this most 
fundamental of human rights.
 
With 177 cases documented in 2015 after careful scrutiny, the Christian 
community which is a mere 2.3 per cent of the country's population [2011 
Census], continues to be a major target of violence. The actual volume of 
violent persecution is not known. State agencies are reluctant to speak on 
this matter and governments do not keep records unless local police 
register formal cases under the Indian Penal and Criminal Procedure codes.
 
Frightening aspects of this violence is an increasing number of rapes, 
particularly of Catholic Nuns, and other gender violence. Recent months 
have seen an increasing trend to polarize the people in villages, leading 
to social exclusion, ostracisation and denial of employment and social 
services.
 
Topping the list are the States of Madhya Pradesh with 36 cases, and its 
neighbour, Chhattisgarh, 20 cases, both in Central India, and Uttar 
Pradesh, with 22 cases. While the Bharatiya Janata party has been in 
control, of the national government for 22 months only [it earlier ruled 
from 1998 to 2004], the party has been in control of Madhya Pradesh and 
Chhattisgarh for three terms.
 
Physical violence, including assaults by mobs, beatings and torture, were 
the most common with 68 cases, followed by Stopping of worship in churches 
[18 cases] and attacks on churches [18 cases]. Arrests of pastors and their 
companions was a major issue with 18 cases, which does not include those 
who are rounded up by the police and let off after some time, and others 
who were in the custody of mobs for various lengths of time.
 
At least three cases of rape were recorded, including on Nuns.
 
Protests by Christian groups against persecution, especially in New Delhi 
have been brutally crushed. Agitators, including Nuns and other women, 
Clergy and professions have been cane-charged, dragged to police vans and 
detained in cases last year.
 
State impunity, political arrogance of the ruling groups in various States 
of the Union, and increasing complicity of local police and sometimes the 
media, aggravate the pressure on terrorized communities in remote villages 
and small towns.
 
In many cases, justice has been denied to those arrested on trumped-up 
charges - mostly pastors or their associates - and detained in police 
stations or their liberty curtailed in other manners.
 
Government organizations, including the National Commission of Minorities, 
have expressed their helplessness in the matter. Many government structures 
and functionaries, including in the State Minority and human rights 
organizations, are enmeshed in bureaucratic Red Tape. Most such 
organizations consist of political appointees reluctant to take affirmative 
action.
 
Human rights and Freedom of Faith organizations, including the Evangelical 
Fellowship of India, the Alliance Defending Freedom India and Christian 
Legal Association, have had to mobilise legal assistance to ensure the 
freedom of the people, and the security of the pastors and members of 
churches. A National Helpline by the United Christian Forum backed by 
members of the EFI, ADF, CLA and others are an immediate channel of 
communication and assistance.
 
The persecution of Christians is also seen within the larger context of 
sustained violence and persecution of India's very large Muslim community - 
at more than 14 per cent of the population, the second largest in the world 
after Indonesia. The sustained hate campaign against Muslims by several 
Union Ministers and cadres of the ruling Bharatiya Janata party and its 
ideological group, the Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh with its myriad 
specialised organizations known as the "Sangh Parivar", radicalizes people 
at all levels, and more so in rural areas. The cadres are a ready base for 
violence against Christians. Both Muslims and Christians have in recent 
months been also branded as "anti nationals", adding another layer of 
targeted hate.
 
Christians and Muslims have been named as "enemies of the nation" in the 
foundation documents of the RSS and the phrase is common in the public 
discourse in social media. Christian activists and others have been 
targeted and coerced on social media, some of them receiving death threats 
in 2015.
 
The persecution of Christians in India is also rooted in highly bigoted 
laws that have invited international scrutiny, including by the Special 
Rapporteur for Freedom of Religion and Belief of the United Nations Human 
Rights Council. The prime among them is Article 341 Part 3, which 
effectively criminalizes conversion of Indian citizens to Christianity and 
Islam, its punitive measures denying the country's 180 million Dalit 
population [once described as untouchables till the term was outlawed] all 
affirmative action including reservations in legislatures, government 
employment and institutions of higher learning.
 
Laws against conversions in 6 of the largest States of the Union not only 
rob Tribals and Dalits of their rights to Freedom of Faith, some of them 
have punitive measures against pastors connected with the people. Most 
dangerously, the anti conversion laws seem to provide a 'carte blanche', or 
license to non-state actors such as members of the larger "Sangh Parivar" 
and some other ideologically-aligned groups of the RSS but also the police 
and local governments to target Christians and their institutions.
 
The continuing and adverse government focus on National and International 
Civil Society and Human Rights organizations also nurtures the environment 
of hate against minority groups, especially the Christian community which 
has a large number of institutions at the grassroots in areas of health, 
education and the welfare of women and children. The Persecution list does 
not cover such laws being use against Christian not for profit and 
voluntary groups whose funds have been stopped, international funding 
curtailed or licenses cancelled. Licenses for accepting foreign donations 
under the Foreign Contribution regulation act are due for re-validation in 
2016.

For full report click the link to download the PDF 

Issued By:

Rev. Dr. Richard Howell, 
General Secretary 
Evangelical Fellowship of India 
New Delhi, India


Rev. Vijayesh Lal,  
Executive Director (Designate),  
Evangelical Fellowship of India,  
New Delhi, India.  
Email : [email protected] 
 

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