Police said 32 people were detained
for trying to convert people to Christianity in the Madhya Pradesh state
late Thursday, with a leading Catholic association condemning the
accusations as “laughable”.
When a group of priests went
to the police station to enquire about the detentions, their parked car
was torched, allegedly by a mob belonging to a right-wing Hindu group,
said Theodore Mascarenhas, secretary general of the Catholic Bishops’
Conference of India.
The news comes as India’s
Christian minority sounds the alarm over a recent rise in attacks on
churches and members of the faith, blaming the violence on Hindu
hardliners, who they say have become emboldened since Prime Minister
Narendra Modi’s right-wing government swept to power in 2014.
Mascarenhas
said 32 Catholics, including two priests, were detained while
“conducting a routine Christmas carol singing programme”.
“The
charge of conversion on which the priests and seminarians (were)
detained is frivolous and laughable,” Mascarenhas said in a statement on
Friday.
He said carol singing had been a part of the Christmas season in Satna “for the last 30 years”.
Police
in Satna said they had detained the group for questioning after a
resident complained about being “lured by a group of Christians to
convert”.
Eight other priests who went to the police
station to look for the detained group were also taken into custody,
investigating officer Mohini Sharma said.
During their
detention, a mob allegedly set fire to their car outside in an attack
condemned by Mascarenhas as an assault by “terrorists who have taken on
the garb of ‘religious police’”.
All 40 people have been released while no arrests have been made in the arson case, Sharma said.
Right-wing
Hindu groups accuse churches and missionaries of targeting poor
communities with financial incentives in a bid to convert them to
Christianity, claims denied by the clergy.
Five Indian
states, including Madhya Pradesh, have laws requiring individuals to get
permission from government officials before they can convert to another
faith.
Inducing an illegal conversion can mean a jail
term of up to one year. Around 80 per cent of India’s 1.2 billion
population is Hindu, but it is also home to large numbers of Muslims,
Christians and Buddhists.