An
attack on a church in Nepal’s Lumbini Province on Monday was just the
latest in a string of recent violence against Christians in the country.
The church is in the southern Nawalparasi district of Lumbini along the
border with India’s Uttar Pradesh state and was one of two churches in
the same town that were vandalized over the weekend.
Photos and
videos reviewed by International Christian Concern (ICC) showed broken
windows and other signs of violence around the property, including
damage to fences and a broken motorbike. Another photo shared on social
media showed two men, identified as pastors, being assaulted on the
street. Gathered locals appear to have smeared the pastors’ faces with a
sticky black substance in an act described by ICC contacts as a
cultural sign of hatred and disrespect.
ICC has learned that the
attacks in Lumbini are the sixth and seventh such attacks against
churches in Nepal in the last two weeks. “It’s spreading like wildfire,”
a Nepalese civil society leader said about the recent spate of attacks.
Perpetrators, seeing little to no response from the authorities in
recent weeks, “are encouraged to act more,” he told ICC.
News of
another incident of men assaulting Christians, this time in Janakpur,
emerged on Tuesday as word of Monday’s attack on the two pastors spread.
“Nepal
has long been on our radar for its persecution of Christians and
hypocrisy related to religious freedom,” said ICC President Jeff King.
“Nepalese citizens have the right to practice their faith according to
the constitution as long as they keep that faith to themselves. Any
proselytizing can bring significant persecution and consequences.”
In
Kathmandu, the country’s capital city, two men were apparently arrested
and taken to court for street preaching. Though the country’s
constitution ostensibly protects religious freedom, it does so in vague
enough terms to allow a law today that criminalizes proselytization.
Chapter 19 of the Muluki Ain, or general code of Nepal, states that “no
one shall propagate any religion in such manner as to undermine the
religion of other nor shall cause other to convert his or her religion.”
Religious
minorities are regularly arrested and charged under this law, which
goes beyond its neighbor India’s bans on forced conversions to
criminalizing participation in the act of conversion in any form. In
Nepal, proselytization carries with it the threat of up to six years in
prison and subsequent deportation in the case of foreigners.
The
U.S. Department of State highlighted its concerns with Nepal’s
anti-conversion and anti-proselytization laws in a report published
earlier this year. “Multiple religious groups in the country,” the
report stated, “[continue] to reiterate that the constitutional and
criminal code provisions governing religious conversion and proselytism
[are] vague and contradictory and [open] the door for prosecution for
actions carried out in the normal course of practicing one’s religion.”
Wednesday, September 6, 2023
7 churches attacked in Nepal over the past 2 weeks
For interviews, please contact: press@persecution.org.
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