
Christians in India have welcomed a court order calling on authorities to approve requests for prayer gatherings in Uttar Pradesh, the nation’s most populous state, amid a rise in persecution against Christians. Source: UCA News.
A two-judge bench of the Allahabad High Court, the top court in the northern state, directed state authorities to “consider” representations from Christians for holding religious prayer meetings and “decide as per the law” after taking opinion from the local police on June 20.
The judges said that they found that the “holding of religious prayers is not violative of any law that has been shown to us”.
“Under the constitution every citizen has a right to practice and perform his faith and religious congregation that is, of course, subject to public order,” they said.
The court asked the petitioners to file fresh applications to the state authorities, which they should “consider and decide” as per the law by taking opinion from the local police.
The order came in response to petitions from different Christian groups accusing government officials of denying them permission to hold routine prayer meetings.
“I was forced to approach the top court after the local police did not allow me to hold a prayer meeting on the premises of my legally registered society,” Pastor Sukesh Kumar, one of the petitioners, said on Monday.
“The risk involved in holding such a prayer meeting without the consent of police is too high as they level false charges of religious conversion,” Pastor Kumar said.
It is common for police to arrest and jail prayer leaders and others without bothering with “a preliminary probe,” he said.
The state, ruled by the pro-Hindu Bhartiya Janta Party (BJP), registered more than 400 anti-conversion cases against Christians after a draconian law criminalising conversion was enacted in 2021, he said, adding that “not a single case of conversion was proven.”
The law stipulates up to 20 years’ imprisonment for violators.
About 80 per cent of Uttar Pradesh’s more than 200 million people are Hindus, while Christians make up less than half a per cent.
FULL STORY
Let Christians pray, Indian court tells state authorities (UCA News)