|
Over 150
assaults reported, many in southern part of country.
NEW DELHI, December
31 (Compass Direct News) – After unprecedented
large-scale attacks on Christians in the previous two
years, 2009 brought hardly any respite as the minority
faith faced an average of more than three violent
attacks a week.
There were at least 152 attacks on Christians in 2009,
according to the “Partial List of Major Incidents of
Anti-Christian Violence in India” released by the
Evangelical Fellowship of India.
“The trend of attacks on the Christian community by
rightwing Hindu groups goes unabated,” said Dr. Dominic
Emmanuel, the spokesperson of the Delhi Catholic
Archdiocese. “Overall, the Christian community still
feels insecure.”
Emmanuel also noted that none of the states that have
“anti-conversion” laws have repealed them. The
north-central states of Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh,
Orissa in the east, Gujarat in the west and Himachal
Pradesh in the north have anti-conversion laws, which
Hindu hardliners routinely use to arrest Christians on
spurious accusations of “forcible conversion.”
“If 2007 and 2008 went down in history as the most
blood-soaked ones in the history of modern Christianity
in India, 2009 surely rates as the year of frustrating
confrontations with the law and tardy governance and on
justice for the victims of communal violence,” said Dr.
John Dayal, a Christian and human rights activist and
member of the government’s National Integration Council.
Dayal referred to violence that erupted in Orissa’s
Kandhamal district during the Christmas week in 2007,
killing at least four Christians and burning 730 houses
and 95 churches. The attacks were carried out to avenge
an alleged attack on a Vishwa Hindu Parishad (World
Hindu Council or VHP) leader, Swami Laxmanananda
Saraswati.
Violence re-erupted in Kandhamal in August 2008 after
the assassination of Saraswati by a Maoist group, as
rightwing Hindu groups falsely blamed Christians for it.
This time, the violence killed more than 100 people and
resulted in the incineration of 4,640 houses, 252
churches and 13 educational institutions.
No Longer a Haven
A disturbing new trend emerged this year as southern
India, which had long been considered a haven for
Christians, recorded the highest incidence of
anti-Christian violence. Of the total 152 incidents, 86
were reported from southern states, mainly Karnataka
with 48, Andhra Pradesh with 29, Tamil Nadu with five
and Kerala with four.
Northern and central states, seen as the stronghold of
rightwing Hindu extremists, recorded 42 incidents of
violence, half the number in the south.
There were 15 attacks in Madhya Pradesh state, 14 in
neighboring Chhattisgarh, three each in Uttar Pradesh
and the Himalayan states of Himachal Pradesh and Jammu
and Kashmir, and one each in the national capital Delhi
and neighboring Haryana state.
In the west, seven attacks were reported: six in
Maharashtra and one in Gujarat.
In the northeast, four attacks were reported: three in
Assam and one in Manipur.
Karnataka recorded the highest number of violent
incidents as the first-ever victory of the Hindu
nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) in the state
elections in 2007 emboldened rightwing Hindu extremist
groups. Karnataka became the first southern state with a
stand-alone BJP government in the history of India.
Anti-Christian violence in Andhra Pradesh rose to new
heights after a Christian, Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy,
became the chief minister of the state in May 2004. To
target him politically, rightwing Hindu groups attacked
Christians while accusing them of converting Hindus to
Christianity. This year Reddy died on Sept. 2 in a
chopper crash.
The incidence of Christian persecution in the north and
the central states declined apparently due to the BJP’s
defeat in the April-May general elections and a growing
realization among a section of the BJP leadership that
violent incidents no longer please voters. But the
hard-line section of the BJP and groups linked to the
party, such as the VHP and its youth wing Bajrang Dal,
carried on with their hardcore anti-Christian stand.
Impunity in Orissa
Orissa state in the east, which witnessed two massive
spates of attacks on Christians in 2007 and 2008, saw
only two recorded violent incidents this year.
The morale of Christians in Orissa, however, remained
low as few assailants in the 2008 rampage were brought
to justice.
“The courts in Kandhamal make a mockery of the judicial
process, and the murderers lord it over the witnesses
and victims while judges and law look on,” Dayal said.
“The church remains helpless, its puny effort at giving
strength to the witnesses falling far too short.”
Of 787 cases registered by Orissa police, 100 are being
handled by two-fast track courts in Kandhamal. Around 35
cases have been heard, resulting in around 50
convictions and more than 190 acquittals. Manoj Pradhan,
a legislator for the BJP, has been exonerated “for lack
of evidence” in six cases, most of them involving murder
charges.
Dr. Sajan K. George, national president of the Global
Council of Indian Christians, said the growing number of
acquittals was producing a culture of impunity, “where
those who commit crimes against Christian minority do
not fear punishment by law.”
“As the elected representative of the Orissa state
assembly [Pradhan] has been let off in murder cases,”
George said. “People want to know what has happened to
the long arms of justice.”
Dayal, who was in Kandhamal recently, said that of the
more than 4,640 houses burned in 2008 violence, only 200
have a roof over the rebuilt walls as 2009 ends.
“And perhaps at the end of the next year, another 2,500,
God willing, will have been rebuilt,” he said. “But
around 2,000 houses will even then remain unfinished.”
Dayal added that more than 20,000 men, women and
children of Kandhamal continue to live as refugees or
homeless people in various cities, working at odd jobs
and sometimes begging.
“Some girls have already been pushed into the evil of
human trafficking,” he said.
Most people in Kandhamal remain without jobs, and the
rehabilitation process, in which the church is
participating, still is a long distance from covering
all victims, Dayal said, adding, “The state government
seems to have called it a day with the barest minimum
done in this sector.”
Emmanuel of the Delhi Archdiocese said that since the
BJP is not in power at the federal level, some of their
front organizations such as the Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sang, the VHP and the Bajrang Dal will harass Christians
in order to remain in the news.
“Christianity teaches us to hope in God,” Emmanuel said.
“We can only hope that 2010 will be a better year for
Christians, but in practical terms it really does not
appear that things would be any better as the ranks of
rightwing Hindu fundamentalists keep their pressure.”
There are around 24 million Christians in India, or
roughly 2.3 percent of the over 1.1 billion people.
|