Gujarat must withdraw “freedom of religion act�

By TwoCircles.net staff reporter

Ahmedabad : A non-governmental organisation here has welcomed the decision by the Gujarat Governor Nawal Kishore Sharma to return "The Gujarat Freedom of Religion (Amendment) Bill 2006". 


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Prashant, the organisation working for human rights, justice and peace, in a statement issued here Wednesday, said, "The Bill is violative of the Constitutional Rights of a citizen and very divisive in nature." 

"The Bill in a highly manipulative way, gives a "blanket" permission for a Catholic to become a Protestant and vice versa, and a Shia to become a Sunni  and vice versa,  without understanding the significance of these denominations within their respective faiths, or if actually changing to another denomination could be regarded as "conversion"; on the other hand, regarding Jains and Buddhists  as denominations of the Hindu Religion, has brought much flak from the followers of Jainism and Buddhism," reads the statement.

The statement has posed the following questions to the Gujarat Government, which passed the Bill, in its original form, on March 26, 2003: why did they take more than  three years to usher in an amendment; why  did  they  not  frame the bye-laws to ensure implementation of  the  law from March 26, 2003 onwards; are they able  to  produce a single instance of "forced" conversion in Gujarat since the past many years; what is the break-up of the population of Gujarat,  according to the last Census 2001; and by what percentage have the minorities increased / decreased.

"The Government of Gujarat is fully aware that such a draconian law will not pass legal scrutiny. They have to stop indulging in cheap political gimmicks and lies like raising the bogey of "conversions", which is clearly a diversionary tactic, from the real issues that plague the poor and marginalised of Gujarat today.

"Article 25 of the Constitution and Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, guarantee every single individual, the right to preach, propagate and practise one's religion and to choose the religion of one's choice / conscience," the statement said adding that the Gujarat government has no alternative but to withdraw this unconstitutional law immediately.

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