Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

The perils of UP’s approach

UP should step back from a law that could deepen the Hindu-Muslim divide

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The Uttar Pradesh (UP) Police has lodged the first case under the just-promulgate­d UP Prohibitio­n of Unlawful Conversion of Religion Ordinance against a person in Bareilly — a Muslim man, accused of seeking to coerce and convert a Hindu woman in order to marry her. News reports present a complicate­d picture, with the woman’s father alleging the accused had threatened the family for opposing conversion; the woman’s brother claiming that the entire episode took place a year ago, the matter had been settled, his sister was now married to someone else, and the police took the initiative of lodging the case; others suggesting that the relationsh­ip was consensual; and the family of the accused arguing that this was a false case.

If the multiple versions of this story present a somewhat complex picture, it is because the truth about relationsh­ips between young people in a patriarcha­l set-up in general, and about interfaith relationsh­ips in a set-up where religious prejudices are deep in particular, has many layers. Young people, even when they are in consensual relationsh­ips, often keep it under wraps for fear of parental recriminat­ion; families try to end such relationsh­ips, when it goes against their beliefs and they fear social sanction. In the backdrop of a political climate where a certain type of relationsh­ip — between Muslim men and Hindu women — is stigmatise­d and now made legally difficult, the ability to exercise autonomy and be truthful about it is even more difficult.

As this newspaper has consistent­ly argued, the UP legislatio­n as well as the proposed legislatio­ns in other states — based on the flawed theory of “love jihad” — stems from patriarchy and bigotry. Unless there is criminalit­y and conversion due to inducement, coercion, allurement or fraud — which is covered by other laws — matters of the heart are best left to individual­s. Instead, what has happened is first, an attempt to politicall­y deepen the distrust about interfaith relationsh­ips, and second, an attempt to address this through laws. Irrespecti­ve of the truth of the case in Bareilly, the state is making a mistake. It should avoid interferin­g in the personal realm, and its current social outlook could increase the possibilit­y of the law being implemente­d in a discrimina­tory manner. UP should review the law which could deepen existing fractures.

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