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CA Topic

Rajasthan Proposes New Anti-Conversion Bill

Brief Context

Context The Rajasthan government has announced stringent provisions under its proposed Rajasthan Prohibition of Unlawful Conversion of Religion Bill, 2025. Key Provisions of the New Bill General offences: Unlawful conversions will invite imprisonment of seven to fourteen years and a minimum fine of ₹5 lakh. (Earlier: one to five years and ₹15,000 fine).

Source Content

Syllabus: GS2/ Polity and Governance

Context

  • The Rajasthan government has announced stringent provisions under its proposed Rajasthan Prohibition of Unlawful Conversion of Religion Bill, 2025.

Key Provisions of the New Bill

  • General offences: Unlawful conversions will invite imprisonment of seven to fourteen years and a minimum fine of ₹5 lakh. (Earlier: one to five years and ₹15,000 fine).
  • Vulnerable groups: If the converted person is a minor, woman, differently abled, or from SC/ST communities, the punishment will be ten to twenty years of imprisonment and a fine of ₹10 lakh.
  • Mass conversions: In cases of mass conversions, guilty parties face twenty years to life imprisonment along with a minimum fine of ₹25 lakh.
  • Voluntary conversion procedures:
    • Individuals must submit a declaration to the District Magistrate (DM) 60 days before the conversion.
    • The convertor (priest/organiser) must also give a 30-day prior notice.
    • The DM will order a police inquiry to verify the intent of conversion.
    • After conversion, the individual must appear before the DM within 21 days to confirm their identity and declaration.
  • Expanded definition of “allurement”: The bill defines allurement broadly, including promises of a better lifestyle, divine blessings, material benefits, or free education from a religious institution.
  • FIR by family members: Blood relatives will be allowed to file an FIR if they suspect an unlawful conversion.
  • Repeat offences: A repeat offender can face life imprisonment and a fine of ₹50 lakh. The state can also cancel the organisation’s registration, stop grants, and confiscate/demolish property used for illegal conversions.

Concerns

  • Burden of proof: The accused has to prove innocence, making all offences cognizable and non-bailable.
  • Misuse of provisions: Critics warn the bill could be used to harass minorities and interfaith couples, given its stringent provisions and reversal of burden of proof.

Source: IE

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