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There Was A Huge Uproar Over Religious Conversion In Village Nari Of Kurud Police Station Area Of ​​The District. Bajrang Dal Workers Protested By Raising Slogans. On Receiving The Information, The Police Team Reached There And Pacified The People By Giving Advice. Dhamtari (Naiduniya representative). There was a huge uproar over religious conversion in village Nari of Kurud police station area of ​​the district . Bajrang Dal workers protested by raising slogans. On receiving the information, the police team reached there and pacified the people by giving advice. According to the information received, a Christian prayer meeting was organized in village Nari on Sunday. Converted people and other people of the village were also present in this prayer meeting. Bajrang Dal workers reached here after getting information and protested by raising slogans. The people of the village also demonstrated against the religious conversion. Villagers told that efforts are being made to convert people in the name of prayer meeting. Abuses are used against Hindu Gods and Goddesses and efforts are being made to brainwash them by portraying their religion as big and important. Such attempts will not be tolerated. In this regard, Kurud police station in-charge Arun Sahu says that during the prayer meeting, a dispute had arisen between two parties in village Nari. There was an argument

Meanwhile, Hindu Jagriti Sena has filed a counter-complaint against the nurses for converting the patients at the health centre into Christianity. Nine members of a right-wing outfit were booked for allegedly storming into the official quarters of a government health and wellness centre in Ratkal village of Kalburgi and accusing the nurses of trying to convert their patients to Christianity in exchange for monetary incentives. The accused, however, lodged a counter-complaint against the nurses for alleged conversion.According to the complaint lodged by one of the nurses, Ashwini, at Ratkal police station, “On February 24, two nurses, Rubika and Ashwini, filed a complaint that on February 22, some members of Hindu Jagriti Sena barged into the health centre in Ratkal village and inquired about their religion. On learning that they were Christians, the accused tried to convince them to convert the patients to Christianity in exchange for money.” The intrusion and intimidation prompted the hospital staff to alert the police authorities, leading to police intervention.Based on the complaint, police booked nine members of the Hindu Jagariti Sena, including president Shankar Choka, Basavaraj and Vishnu, under the Atrocities Act. “Based on a complaint, we registered a case against the nine members of Hindu Jagriti Sena under

A poster demanding the removal of religious symbols from Christian schools has yet again surfaced in India’s northeastern Assam state, asserting it as the final warning. The poster issued by Sanmilito Sanatan Samaj, a hardline Hindu outfit on Feb. 23, gave the ultimatum to remove statues and crosses from the premises of Christian-run schools in state's business capital Guwahati and two other major cities, Dibrugarh and Jorhat.“This is the final warning to stop using schools as a religious institution. Remove Jesus Christ, Mary, etc, from school premises,” warned the latest poster in Assamese, the state's official language. In Guwahati,  the posters appeared on the walls of Don Bosco School and St. Mary’s School. The poster asked missionaries not to turn education into a religious affair. “I suspect this is the same group with a different name but the same demand. They may be trying our patience,” Archbishop John Moolachira of Guwahati told UCA News on Feb. 26. In Dibrugarh, it was fixed on the walls of Don Bosco High School, and in Jorhat, the poster was found on the wall of Carmel School.The posters were also found in Barpeta and Sivasagar towns. Father Mathew Anchukandam, the archdiocesan vicar-general, said similar posters were found on Feb. 18 that forced Christian schools to seek

Husband filed a complaint against his wife to the Superintendent of Police, Ghantaghar police station is investigating,Udaipur. After Bharatpur division of Rajasthan, a case of religious conversion has also come to light in Udaipur. Which is being investigated by Ghantaghar police station. The matter is from the Ghantaghar police station area of ​​the city, where the police has received a complaint about a Hindu woman becoming a Christian and trying to convert her children into Christians by putting pressure on them. The woman's husband, in his complaint against his wife to the Superintendent of Police, alleged that his wife was missing along with his twelve-year-old son, who was now eager to convert his son also into a Christian. In the complaint, the Ghantaghar area man told the Superintendent of Police that his wife was reading books given by Christian missionaries for the last few months. She started going to church and putting pressure on her children to read and adopt Christian books. Even after several attempts by her husband, she did not agree and started fighting. On January 17, she went to the missionaries' place without informing her husband and refused to talk when contacted. After a month she returned home and told that she had converted to Christianity

A threat by a radical Hindu group to missionary schools across Assam to remove iconography and chapels from their premises has led to concerns among principals and church bodies in the state, prompting police to take note. In the past week, principals of several missionary schools across the state have written to their local police asking for protection against untoward incidents, with the head of a group called the Kutumba Suraksha Parishad declaring Thursday as the “deadline” for them to accede to his demands. Assam Director General of Police G P Singh told The Indian Express, “District police have been advised across the state that no untoward incident should be allowed.” On February 7, Satya Ranjan Borah, president of the radical Hindu group, announced that he would give missionary schools in Assam 15 days to get rid of “photos and statues of Jesus Christ and Mary, crosses, churches on campus”. He also demanded that elements of Christianity be removed from their morning prayers and that no teachers be dressed in vestments. He had threatened that if they did not, “we will not leave them… we will not be responsible for the consequences.”“… there is a fear that has crept among our members regarding the safety

The matter was taken up by Auxiliary Bishop of Tura Jose Chirackal.According to his statement, Sr. Rosemary, serving at St. John’s parish, Siju, South Garo Hills  had to travel from Dudhnoi to Goalpara on February 17. She boarded a bus at 11 am  from Dudhnoi and paid the fare upto Dudhnoi. “Soon after, the bus conductor and some of the passengers began to make derogatory remarks on her, her religious habit and her faith. After some time, they stopped the bus at an isolated place and she was forced to alight from the bus. The incident caused serious mental agony and harassment to Sister Rosemary both as a woman and a religious person. With the help of some other people, the Sister then took another bus to proceed to Goalpara”, the Bishop said. The Bishop said there are numerous religious priests and nuns in Assam who wear their religious dress as any other place in the country. Harassment of people because they wear a particular dress or religious habit is ridiculous and unheard of. Such incidents take place because of a false narrative and propaganda spread against a particular religion. It is the duty of any Government to take adequate steps to

Hyderabad: Unidentified miscreants have desecrated graves at a Christian cemetery in Secunderabad.According to reports, some graves were recently desecrated by miscreants at St John’s cemetery in Secunderabad, which is one of the oldest cemeteries in the region. The incident came to light on Wednesday. Expressing concern, several community leaders have urged the state government to take steps to prevent such attacks on minority communities and bring the preparators to justice.When contacted, DCP North zone Rohini Priyadarshini confirmed the incident. She said, “We have received a report that only one grave in the cemetery was damaged. However, we have not received any complaint so far.” The officer refused say whether or not the incident was communal in nature. “We in the process of verifying details of the incident. Further action will follow,” she told Siasat.com.Notably, on February 13, a scuffle broke out between Bajrang Dal members and Dalit Christians near the Methodist church in Janwada village of Rangareddy district late on Tuesday, resulting in injuries to at least 14 people. The clash stemmed from a disagreement over road widening. The Bajrang Dal men had demanded expansion of a road towards the church compound. The church members objected to move, resulting in the opposing group launching an

Nanpara (Bahraich). A case of attempt to convert religion in the name of prayer meeting has come to light in the area. On the complaint of this matter, the police have arrested three people. On Sunday, many women and men gathered in the house of Baburam, a resident of village Siddhanpurwa of Nanpara area, and were holding a prayer meeting of Christian religion. It is alleged that objectionable comments were being made about Hindu deities during the meeting. On getting information about this, Bajrang Dal Awadh province department convenor Dipanshu Srivastava reached the village along with some people. He protested against the actions of the people present in Baburam's house. Due to this some people started fighting. Dipanshu reported the incident to the police. Nanpara Kotwali in-charge Mithilesh Kumar Rai said that a case has been registered in connection with the incident and Baburam resident of Kotwa Washirganj, Shatrughan Lal resident of Basantpur police station Khairighat and Gurudin Gautam resident of village Maghi have been arrested. This article is originally published on https://www.amarujala.com/uttar-pradesh/bahraich/three-arrested-bahraich-news-c-98-1-slko1013-110282-2024-02-19

Kolkata, Feb 20 (PTI) TMC councillor Ananya Banerjee on Tuesday received flak from both her party and opposition BJP for her controversial remarks about the Christian community, with Mayor of Kolkata Firhad Hakim condemning the remarks and seeking an explanation from her. Denouncing her remarks made during a discussion of the Kolkata Municipal Corporation, Hakim emphasised that the KMC and the Trinamool Congress dissociate themselves from such a view and have taken steps to address the matter internally. He stated, “Yesterday during a discussion on the KMC budget, councillor Ananya Banerjee made a few remarks about a particular community. We condemn such remarks. The party doesn’t endorse her views. Don’t share her views. The TMC’s municipal team has sought an explanation from her.” The comments made by Banerjee, an actor-turned-politician, on Monday have been expunged from the KMC proceedings. Banerjee said that she referred to an “allegorical tale” involving Fathers and Nuns to buttress her point that one should read the KMC budget documents carefully. She also expressed regret if her comments hurt the religious sentiments of anyone.BJP councillor Sajal Ghosh slammed the TMC and Bandyopadhyay for making such remarks against the Christian community. “What business does the Church have in the KMC’s Budget Session?

The decision last month by India’s federal government to “seal” the open border with Myanmar will mainly impact indigenous tribes in the northeast region such as Nagas and Mizos, most of whom are Christians and share ethnic affinity and kinship ties that cut across political borders. There were angry outbursts by most tribal people but many sought to clarify that they “would not like to be seen as causing hurdles” in India's effort to secure its border.Leaders of indigenous people's groups and rights activists met in Dimapur, a commercial city in Nagaland state, on Feb. 16 and condemned the decision to do away with “free movement” across the Myanmar border. "The decision to do away with the Free Movement Regime (FMR) and erect border fencing is not only impractical and dehumanizing to the communities living on both sides of the border but, such an approach may only diminish the prospects for peace and wellbeing in the restive region,” they stated in a letter sent to Prime Minister Narendra Modi.  Officials in the federal Ministry of Home Affairs said the FMR was scrapped to ensure “the internal security of the country and to maintain the demographic structure” in the northeastern states. India and Myanmar agreed in

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