Nepal starts enforcing law criminalizing evangelism

The Nepal parliament passed a Bill on 8 August 2017 criminalising religious conversion and the ‘hurting of religious sentiment’. It was later approved and signed by the country’s...

The Nepal parliament passed a Bill on 8 August 2017 criminalising religious conversion and the ‘hurting of religious sentiment’. It was later approved and signed by the country’s first female President Bidya Devi Bhandari. Photo: Nepal’s President’s Office
By World Watch Monitor
A law criminalising evangelism, conversions to Christianity and the hurting of religious feelings has come into force in Nepal this this week, a year after the bill was endorsed and signed by the country’s first female president.
 
The wording of Clause 158 of section 9 of the Law, which criminalises the ‘hurting of religious sentiment’, is similar to the blasphemy laws in Pakistan, which make it a criminal offence to insult another’s religion.
 
Critics say these laws are poorly defined and widely misused to settle personal scores, to target religious minorities or to further extremist agendas. 
 
Hindus account for over 80 per cent of Nepal’s 26 million people. According to the 2011 census, there are just 364,000 Christians. But many observers believe there are significantly more, but that newly converted Christians would be afraid to state their religion and so remain registered as Hindus, and residents absent when the data was collected were recorded as Hindu.
 
In a recent interview with World Watch Monitor, Professor Tanka Subedi, chairperson of Nepal’s Religious Liberty Forum, said he was shocked at the comments made by the prime minster earlier this year, when he openly criticised foreign Christians for converting people to other religions.
 
“We have deported many who came to Nepal in the name of observation when they actually were converting people to other religions,” the prime minster, K.P. Oli said in March.
 
Professor Subedi said that, “When we heard [these] things from the prime minister, that was not what we expect from a guardian. He is our prime minister. Christians have also voted for him. And many people are following his party who are in the Church”.
 
The professor also highlighted the problems caused by a group known as the Mongol National Army, which has published a press release saying it is going to “destroy all the [Hindu] temples and gumbads [tombs] and build churches in their place”. The group has also declared that Nepal will be a Christian nation by 2025.
 
“We have objected to that and said that we have no connection with this group,” the professor said. “This [group] is not from the Christian community … But the Home Minister took it as a real matter, done by Christians. And he made public statements against Christians and said, ‘I will be very hard on Christians and conversions’.
 
“And then recently, somebody shot a Hindu priest in Virat Nagar, where they also left a leaflet in which they made many accusations against Hindus like becoming pro-Indian and many other things, but it also included [accusations of] destroying Bibles. So because of that one word, ‘Bible’, some people are taking [it] as if it was done by the Christians. And rallies and [other] things are happening in different cities in Nepal against Christians, speaking against Christians.”
 
Professor Subedi said some pastors have received threats, demanding that they bring “David Tamang”, the purported leader of the Mongol National Army, to them.
 
“We don’t know who David Tamang is, whether that person exists, or what is [the] Mongol organisation,” the professor said. “We have no idea. And the Christian community doesn’t have any connection with them … The Christian community in Nepal is an indigenous religious group. The government should respect that, and look at them with dignity. So, now we are feeling a bit side-lined by the government and that’s not what the Christian community in Nepal wants, or any other religious group wants.”
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