India: Pentecostal pastor mobbed for 'converting people'

A Pentecostal pastor in India had to be rescued by police after being surrounded by right-wing activists who had accused him of converting local people.

Pastor Lal Singh and another man known only as Idaram were bought to a police station in Barwani district following complaints by a local right-wing group. Activists had protested outside Idaram's house, where a prayer meeting was taking place, shouting anti-Christian slogans.

After the pastor and his colleague were taken to the police station, the protestors surrounded the building, forcing the authorities to detain the two men for longer.

"The [activists] were agitated and would have harmed the pastor had I released him,'' Head Constable Rameshwar Pande told The Indian Express.

The officer in charge of Rajpur Police Station, Asharam Varma, told the newspaper that the accusations of conversion were found to be false, and the men were not charged.

Five states in India currently have anti-conversion laws which state that those who wish to convert to another religion must first gain official permission. Religious leaders are also required by law to report conversions or risk a three-year jail sentence themselves.

However, a fifth of the population identify with religions other than Hinduism, and there have been increasing calls for the government to strengthen protections for minority groups.

Prompted by the urging of Barack Obama on a recent visit to India, in addition to a spate of church attacks in Delhi, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has promised to promote religious freedom.

"We cannot accept violence against any religion on any pretext and I strongly condemn such violence. My government will act strongly in this regard," he said last month.

However, reports recently emerged of 20 Christian evangelists being harassed and beaten by police in Rajasthan state.

People's Union for Civil Liberties head Kavita Srivastava told the World Watch Monitor (WWM) that the Christians were detained in Jaipur after attempting to preach there on February 25. They were also allegedly beaten with sticks on their hands and wrists by policemen.

related articles
\'Nazi\' warning on India church burnings from Catholic bishop
'Nazi' warning on India church burnings from Catholic bishop

'Nazi' warning on India church burnings from Catholic bishop

Narendra Modi pledges to protect Christians following church attacks
Narendra Modi pledges to protect Christians following church attacks

Narendra Modi pledges to protect Christians following church attacks

Opposition parties urge India\'s PM Modi to \'walk the talk\' on religious tolerance
Opposition parties urge India's PM Modi to 'walk the talk' on religious tolerance

Opposition parties urge India's PM Modi to 'walk the talk' on religious tolerance

20 Indian Christians claim they were detained and beaten by police
20 Indian Christians claim they were detained and beaten by police

20 Indian Christians claim they were detained and beaten by police

News
Joining the dots
Joining the dots

Jewish academic and Hebrew scholar Irene Lancaster reflects on lessons from Abraham and the significance of something as small as a dot. 

Christians join calls to scrap two-child benefit limit
Christians join calls to scrap two-child benefit limit

A coalition of 101 organisations, including Christians, has called on the government to abolish the two-child limit on benefits in full, warning that “half-measures” will fail to lift families out of poverty.

Christian charity urges churches to reach out to homeless women
Christian charity urges churches to reach out to homeless women

A Christian homelessness charity has warned that thousands of women experiencing homelessness are being overlooked in official government figures.

Christian groups welcome government moves to criminalise porn depicting strangulation
Christian groups welcome government moves to criminalise porn depicting strangulation

The government has announced new laws that will criminalise the possession and publication of pornographic material depicting strangulation or suffocation, following mounting concerns that such images are helping to normalise violence in sexual behaviour.