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Home  » News » Religious freedom in India on 'negative trajectory': Report

Religious freedom in India on 'negative trajectory': Report

By Lalit K Jha
May 02, 2016 23:15 IST
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Religious freedom in India was on a "negative trajectory" in 2015 as religious tolerance "deteriorated" and religious freedom violations "increased", a United States report on international religious freedom said on Monday.

In its annual report, the Congress-mandated US Commission for International Religious Freedom asked the Indian government to publicly rebuke officials and religious leaders that make derogatory statements about religious communities.

"In 2015, religious tolerance deteriorated and religious freedom violations increased in India," the report said.

Members of USCIRF were denied visas by the Indian government early this year on the argument that religious freedom is enshrined in the constitution and any foreign third party has no locus standi to comment or investigate on it.

"Minority communities, especially Christians, Muslims, and Sikhs, experienced numerous incidents of intimidation, harassment, and violence, largely at the hands of Hindu nationalist groups," the report alleged.

USCIRF alleged that members of the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party tacitly supported these groups and used religiously-divisive language to further inflame tensions.

"These issues, combined with longstanding problems of police bias and judicial inadequacies, have created a pervasive climate of impunity, where religious minority communities feel increasingly insecure, with no recourse when religiously-motivated crimes occur," said USCIRF which has retained India in the tier-2 countries on religious freedom.

India has been placed in tier-2 since 2009. Others listed in the tier-2 countries are Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Cuba, Indonesia, Kazakhastan, Laos, Malaysia, Russia and Turkey.

It has recommended to the state department to designate eight countries -- Central African Republic, Egypt, Iraq, Nigeria, Pakistan, Syria, Tajikistan and Vietnam as countries of particular concern or CPC.

USCIRF recommendations are not binding on the state department, which has so far put nine countries in this list -- Myanmar, China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.

Stating that though it has again placed India on tier 2, where it has, been since 2009, USCIRF noted that the largest democratic country of the world "is on a negative trajectory" in terms of religious freedom.

Observing that it will continue to monitor the situation closely during the year ahead to determine if India should be recommended to the state department for designation as a "country of particular concern," USCIRF urged the US to integrate concern for religious freedom into bilateral contacts with India, including the framework of future strategic dialogues, at both the federal and provincial level.

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Lalit K Jha in Washington DC
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