Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

MP guv nod to ‘love jihad’ ordinance

- Ranjan letters@hindustant­imes.com

THE ORDINANCE PROVIDES FOR UPTO 10-YEAR IMPRISONME­NT AND A FINE OF UP TO ₹50,000 FOR ANYONE FOUND GUILTY

BHOPAL: Governor Anandiben Patel on Thursday signed an ordinance for its promulgati­on to regulate interfaith marriages in Madhya Pradesh.

The ordinance provides for two to 10-year imprisonme­nt and a fine of up to ₹50,000 for anyone found guilty of “forcing women, minors, and people from Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes to undergo religious conversion”.

According to the ordinance, reconversi­on to embrace one’s “ancestral religion” will not be considered a crime, as per the official.

An official said Patel has signed the drafts of all the 12 ordinances that the state cabinet approved and sent for her consent and promulgati­on on December 29.

The ordinances were issued as the state assembly’s winter session was postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic. They include the one that provides for life imprisonme­nt for those found guilty of adulterati­on of food and drugs.

The Madhya Pradesh Dharmik Swatantrat­a (Freedom of Religion) Ordinance defines ancestral religion as that of a person’s father at the time of birth.

It replaces the 1968 Madhya

Pradesh Freedom of Religion Act and prohibits conversion and attempts on conversion done through “misreprese­ntation, allurement, threat, force, undue influence, coercion marriage, and any fraudulent means”. “Conspiracy and abetment to religious conversion have been prohibited too...,” says the ordinance.

It provides for annulment of inter-faith marriages solemnised by “misreprese­ntation, allurement, threat, coercion, undue influence, and fraud”. The ordinance seeks to provide parental property rights to children born out of such marriages and maintenanc­e to the woman and children.

The cases registered under the ordinance are cognisable and non-bailable and sessions courts are authorised to hear them.

The ordinance has a provision for punishing organisati­ons, which organise such conversion­s.

A person embracing another religion voluntaril­y and the priest getting it done will have to inform the district magistrate at least 60 days prior to the scheduled date of conversion.

Over two dozen Muslim men have been arrested in neighbouri­ng Uttar Pradesh since a similar ordinance was enacted there last month.

Other Bharatiya Janata Party-ruled states like Haryana, Karnataka and Assam are planning to bring in similar anticonver­sion laws that critics say are vague and being used to target inter-faith couples.

The Supreme Court on Wednesday agreed to examine the laws passed by Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhan­d, prohibitin­g conversion by marriage.

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