Tag: interfaith

  • Bhopal: Interfaith duo on bike harassed; girl’s niqab pulled down

    Bhopal: Interfaith duo on bike harassed; girl’s niqab pulled down

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    An interfaith couple in Madhya Pradesh who were travelling on their bike was halted and heckled by some men on March 26.

    The incident took place in Bhopal’s Karond, where the couple, reportedly a Muslim woman and a Hindu man were harassed and shamed publicly for travelling and being a purported couple.

    In a video which is doing rounds on social media, some men can be seen cordoning off the motorcycle of a couple and questioning their morality.

    The man recording the video forcefully pulls down the girl’s niqaab (veil) stating that he will have to use force against her if she doesn’t reveal her face.

    In the video, the man also publicises the locality the man and the woman belong to alongside their religion.

    The man alleges that the Hindu man had taken the woman to an OYO (room).

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • HC rejects ‘love jihad’ claim, says interfaith relations can’t have religious angle by default

    HC rejects ‘love jihad’ claim, says interfaith relations can’t have religious angle by default

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    Mumbai: A relationship cannot be dubbed as a form of ‘love jihad’ just because the boy and the girl belong to different religions, the Aurangabad bench of the Bombay High Court has said while granting pre-arrest bail to a Muslim woman and her family.

    A division bench of Justices Vibha Kankanwadi and Abhay Waghwase in the order passed on February 26 granted anticipatory bail to the accused who were denied relief by a local court in Aurangabad.

    The woman’s former lover had alleged she and her family forced him to convert to Islam and undergo circumcision.

    The man’s lawyer, while opposing the pre-arrest bail applications of the woman and her family members, also argued that it was a case of `love jihad’.

    ‘Love jihad’ is a term used by Hindu right-wing organisations to claim, without evidence, that there is a widespread conspiracy to lure Hindu women and convert them to Islam through marriage.

    Here, though, the accuser was a man.

    The high court rejected the love jihad argument, pointing out that the man, in the First Information Report (FIR), had admitted he was in a relationship with the woman and did not end the relationship despite having several opportunities.

    “Merely because the boy and girl are from different religions, it cannot have a religious angle. It can be a case of pure love for each other,” the court said.

    “It appears that now the colour has been tried to be given of love jihad, but when love is accepted then there is less possibility of the person being trapped just for converting him into the other’s religion,” it added.

    As per the prosecution case, the man and the woman were in a relationship since March 2018. The man belonged to a Scheduled Caste community, but did not disclose this to the woman.

    Later, the woman began insisting he should convert to Islam and marry her, after which the man disclosed his caste identity to her parents. They did not object to his caste identity and convinced their daughter to accept it.

    But the relations later turned sour, following which the man lodged a case against the woman and her family in December 2022.

    The HC, while granting pre-arrest bail to the woman and her family, said the probe into the case was almost over and hence their custody would not be necessary.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Telangana: Interfaith couple ends life in Medak district

    Telangana: Interfaith couple ends life in Medak district

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    Hyderabad: The love story of an interfaith couple from Medak district ended in tragedy as both the man and woman ended their lives after their families opposed their relationship. Kalpana, 20, and Khaleel, 22, both from the village of Narsingi village in Medak district, took the extreme step a few days ago by jumping into a water body.

    Both were missing from February 13, and were found dead in a pond on Thursday morning, said cops from Medak district. Police officials said that they were both in love from years and that the young woman had been married-off to another man three months ago in Kamareddy district.

    Kalpana had come home for a few days and told her family that she was going out for a while. After she was nowhere to be found by her family, they lodged a complaint. Cops said that the woman continued to be in touch with Khaleel even after marriage. On February 13, the cops suspected that she had gone with hm after she went missing.

    Khaleel used to drive a tractor to earn a living. Cops in Medak district both the families were also opposed to the union, and that there was a history of both sides getting into arguments over the couple’s relationship. Sub-inspector of Naringi police station, Medak, said that both bodies have been sent for post-mortem. A case has been registered.

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    #Telangana #Interfaith #couple #ends #life #Medak #district

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Man shot; cars damaged in clash after inter-faith marriage in Haryana

    Man shot; cars damaged in clash after inter-faith marriage in Haryana

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    Gurugram: A man was shot at and vehicles were damaged in a clash between two groups allegedly after an inter-faith marriage in Haryana’s Pataudi area, police said on Tuesday.

    On January 30, a Muslim man from Pataudi’s Baba Shah locality lodged a police complaint alleging that his 22-year-old daughter had gone missing. It was later found that she had married one Rakesh, they said.

    After the wedding, Rakesh had started receiving threat calls. He informed his relatives in Rewari about the calls and they reached out to Bajrang Dal members for help. A group of men led by the outfit’s leader reached the man’s house where the clash erupted, they said.

    An FIR was registered against the Muslim party under sections 148 (riots), 149 (unlawful assembly), 323 (causing hurt), 506 (criminal intimidation), 380 (theft) and 427 (causing damage) of the IPC.

    Mubin Khan, a resident of the same locality, said his son Mohin, who was at a grocery shop, was shot at during firing between the two groups. His son is being treated in a private hospital in Gurugram and is still unconscious, police said.

    An FIR was registered under section 307 (murder attempt) at the Pataudi police station.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • SC to hear pleas challenging laws regulating conversions due to interfaith marriages

    SC to hear pleas challenging laws regulating conversions due to interfaith marriages

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    New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Monday said it would hear on February 3 a batch of pleas challenging controversial state laws regulating religious conversions due to interfaith marriages.

    A bench comprising Chief Justice DY Chandrachud and justices PS Narasimha and JB Pardiwala noted that a transfer plea was mentioned in the morning.

    “We can list it, issue notice and hear it together. The transfer petition will also be numbered by then. The attorney general can also examine. We will hear all on Friday,” the bench said.

    During the brief hearing, senior advocate CU Singh, appearing in the court on behalf of NGO “Citizens for Justice and Peace” of activist Teesta Setalwad, submitted that people cannot get married due to these state laws and the situation is very grave.

    Attorney General R Venkataramani submitted that these are state legislations that have been challenged before the apex court and the high courts concerned should hear the cases.

    The top court had earlier asked the parties challenging the anti-conversion laws of several states to file a common petition seeking a transfer of the cases on the issue from various high courts to the apex court.

    Solicitor General Tushar Mehta had challenged the locus standi of “Citizens for Justice and Peace”, which is one of the petitioners. Mehta had not elaborated on the reasons for questioning the NGO’s locus.

    The bench had noted that there were at least five such pleas “before the Allahabad High Court, seven before the Madhya Pradesh High Court, two each before the Gujarat and Jharkhand high courts, three before the Himachal Pradesh High Court, and one each before the Karnataka and Uttarakhand high courts”, and said a common petition for their transfer can be filed.

    Besides, two separate petitions have been filed by Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh, challenging the interim orders of the respective high courts that stayed certain provisions of the state laws on conversion.

    Earlier, a bench headed by Justice M R Shah had said religious conversion is a serious issue that should not be given a political colour.

    It had sought the attorney general’s assistance on the plea filed by advocate Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay.

    Another bench headed by the CJI had, on January 2, sought to know the status of the cases pending before different high courts challenging controversial state laws regulating religious conversion due to interfaith marriages and said if the cases are similar in nature, it may transfer those to itself.

    It had asked “Citizens for Justice and Peace” and the states of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh to apprise it of the status of the cases challenging the state laws on conversion through marriage.

    The apex court had, on January 6, 2021, agreed to examine certain new and controversial laws of Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand, regulating religious conversions due to interfaith marriages.

    The Uttar Pradesh law relates to not only interfaith marriages but all religious conversions and lays down elaborate procedures for anyone who wishes to convert to another religion.

    The Uttarakhand law entails a two-year jail term for those found guilty of religious conversion through “force or allurement”. The allurement can be in the form of cash, employment or material benefits.

    The plea filed by the NGO has alleged that the legislations violate articles 21 and 25 of the Constitution as those empower the State to suppress an individual’s personal liberty and freedom to practise the religion of his choice.

    Jamiat Ulama-I-Hind has also moved the Supreme Court, challenging the anti-conversion laws of Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh. It has contended that these laws have been enacted to “harass” interfaith couples and implicate them in criminal cases.

    The Muslim body, in its PIL filed through advocate Ejaz Maqbool, has said the provisions of all such laws of the five states force people to disclose their faith and consequently, invade their privacy.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )