Indian school manager booked under conversion law
Hindu parents complain about Islamic texts being recited during morning prayers at Uttar Pradesh school People take part in a procession on the occasion of Hanuman Jayanti in Noida in Uttar Pradesh on April 17 Police in the northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh has booked the manager of a private school in Kanpur city under the anti-conversion law for hurting religious sentiments. According to media reports some Hindu parents complained on Aug. 2 about Islamic texts being recited during morning prayers at Florets International School. However, police said no arrests have been made till today. “I am very surprised that an incident like this has happened as there were no reports of such cases in our localities in the past,” said Father Louis Mascarenhas, diocesan administrator of Allahabad. He told UCA News that it was too early to say what forces are behind the case and provoked parents to lodge the complaint against the school. “We have to wait for the outcome of the investigation,” the priest said. Kanpur assistant commissioner of police Sisamau Nishank Sharma said a case has been lodged against school manager Sumit Makhija after a complaint about Islamic religious texts being recited during morning prayers, The father of a student alleged that the seeds