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Second Indian state steps closer to enacting 'Love Jihad' law

by Reuters
Tuesday, 29 December 2020 11:00 GMT

A bride waits to take her wedding vows during a mass marriage ceremony in which, according to its organisers, 111 Muslim couples took their wedding vows, at a mosque in Ahmedabad, India January 11, 2018. REUTERS/Amit Dave

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The laws ban pressuring a woman to convert to her husband's religion, and have been criticised as targeting minority Muslims

By Saurabh Sharma

LUCKNOW, India Dec 29 (Reuters) - Lawmakers in a central Indian state controlled by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Hindu nationalist party approved legislation on Tuesday that would make pressuring a woman to convert to their husband's religion a crime punishable with imprisonment.

Although no religion is specified in the legislation, critics say it is aimed against the country's Muslim minority. Hardline Hindu groups have accused Muslim men of waging a campaign, dubbed a "Love Jihad", to lure Hindu women to Islam with promises of marriage.

The Freedom of Religion Bill, 2020 will be enacted in Madhya Pradesh once it receives approval from the state's governor, a leader in Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).

"This law will prevent innocent girls being forcefully converted on pretext of marriage," said Narottam Mishra, home minister in the state's BJP-led government.

Virtually identical legislation was passed last month in neighbouring Uttar Pradesh, a northern state also controlled by the BJP. Thirty Muslim men were arrested there earlier this month under the new law for allegedly compelling women to change their religion after getting married.

Other Indian states - Haryana, Karnataka and Assam - have said that they are planning to bring in similar anti-conversion laws. Under the new law, a man and woman belonging to different religions will have to give at least two months notice to the district magistrate before they get married and they will be given permission if there are no objections.

Politicians in Madhya Pradesh have also campaigned for years against Christian missionaries, accusing them of offering financial aid and free education to persuade people to convert to Christianity. (Writing by Rupam Jain, Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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