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Explained: How anti-conversion laws passed by BJP state governments mirror each other


What Happened

  • Multiple BJP-governed states have enacted anti-conversion laws with strikingly similar structures, prohibiting conversion by force, fraud, or allurement and requiring prior government permission for voluntary conversions.
  • States with active anti-conversion laws include: Odisha, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Uttarakhand, and Uttar Pradesh.
  • The laws share common features: prohibition on inducement, allurement, or fraudulent conversion; mandatory reporting to district authorities; prior permission requirements; and enhanced penalties where women, Scheduled Castes, or Scheduled Tribes are involved.
  • Maharashtra has cleared a draft anti-conversion bill proposing up to seven years' imprisonment.
  • Critics argue the laws violate Article 25 of the Constitution by creating a chilling effect on minority religious practice; proponents argue they protect citizens from coercive conversion.
  • The Supreme Court has not definitively struck down these laws, and earlier constitutional challenges were decided in the states' favour.

Static Topic Bridges

Article 25 — Freedom of Religion and the Right to Propagate vs. Right to Convert

Article 25 is the primary constitutional anchor for debates on anti-conversion laws. Its scope — and its limitations — define the legal battleground.

  • Article 25(1): All persons are equally entitled to freedom of conscience and the right to freely profess, practise, and propagate religion — subject to public order, morality, and health.
  • "Propagate" is the operative word: in Stanislaus v. State of Madhya Pradesh (1977), the Supreme Court held that the right to propagate does not include a right to convert another person. Propagation means transmitting religious tenets; it does not extend to the act of conversion itself.
  • Article 25(2)(b): State may regulate or restrict any economic, financial, political, or other secular activity associated with religious practice — used by states to justify regulating the "act" of conversion as a secular, worldly transaction rather than a purely spiritual one.
  • Article 26: Freedom of religious denominations to manage their own affairs in religious matters — distinct from individual freedom under Article 25.
  • Both Articles 25 and 26 are subject to public order, morality, and health — giving states a constitutional hook to argue that coercive conversions disturb public order.

Connection to this news: Every anti-conversion law rests on the Stanislaus precedent: conversion itself is not protected as a fundamental right, only propagation is. This is why the laws have withstood constitutional scrutiny so far.


Stanislaus v. State of Madhya Pradesh (1977) — The Foundational Precedent

This Supreme Court Constitution Bench judgment is the bedrock on which all anti-conversion legislation rests.

  • Case: Rev. Stainislaus v. State of Madhya Pradesh & Ors (1977 AIR 908), decided January 17, 1977 by a five-judge Constitution Bench.
  • Challenge: A Christian missionary challenged Madhya Pradesh's Dharma Swatantrya Adhiniyam (1968) and Odisha's Orissa Freedom of Religion Act (1967) as violating Articles 25 and 14.
  • Held: Both laws were constitutionally valid. Article 25(1) grants the right to "propagate" religion, not the right to "convert" others. Propagation means exposition of tenets; conversion is a separate act.
  • The Court further held that inducing someone to convert through allurement or force is coercive and disrupts public order — a valid ground for state regulation under Article 25(1)'s own qualifications.
  • The Madhya Pradesh and Odisha laws required prior permission from district authorities for conversion ceremonies — upheld as a legitimate regulatory measure.

Connection to this news: The structural similarity across BJP-governed states' laws — prior permission, notice to district magistrates, prohibition on allurement/inducement — directly maps onto the framework the Court validated in Stanislaus. States are legally building on this template.


State Legislation vs. Central Legislation — Legislative Competence

Anti-conversion laws are state laws, raising questions about whether religious conversion is a state subject.

  • The Constitution does not explicitly list religion or conversion in any of the three lists of the Seventh Schedule.
  • Religion and religious practice touch Entry 1 of the Concurrent List (criminal law), Entry 5 (marriage and divorce, which connects to "love jihad" provisions in some laws), and Entry 7 (wills, intestacy) — but conversion itself is typically regulated under states' general police power.
  • Under Entry 1 of List II (State List), states can legislate on public order — and states justify anti-conversion laws as public order measures.
  • Penalty provisions (imprisonment, fines) require coverage under criminal law (Concurrent List Entry 1), where states have competence subject to repugnancy under Article 254.
  • No central anti-conversion law exists; this is deliberately a state-level regulatory domain.

Connection to this news: The mirroring of laws across states is not a sign of central direction (which would require a Union law) but of states independently choosing the same legally validated template established in Stanislaus — demonstrating how a Supreme Court precedent can shape legislative practice across jurisdictions.


Specific State Laws — Key Common Features

All major BJP-state anti-conversion laws share a structural template with minor variations in penalties and scope.

  • Prohibited acts: Conversion by force, fraud, misrepresentation, allurement (gifts, monetary benefits, jobs, marriage promise), or undue influence.
  • Prior permission: In Uttarakhand and UP, a person wishing to convert must give a 60-day advance notice to the District Magistrate. The presiding religious official must also inform the DM.
  • Post-conversion declaration: The converted person must file a declaration before the DM; failure to do so is an offence.
  • Enhanced penalties: If the converted person is a woman, minor, SC/ST member — higher imprisonment terms apply (up to 10 years in UP).
  • Cognizability: Most laws make offences cognizable and non-bailable — police can arrest without warrant.
  • UP's Prohibition of Unlawful Religious Conversion Ordinance (2020), later converted into an Act, added specific provisions targeting conversions through marriage ("love jihad" provisions) — most controversial extension of the template.

Connection to this news: The "mirror" quality of these laws arises because all states adopted the Stanislaus-validated core (prohibition on coercive conversion + prior state notification) and then added politically salient extensions around marriage, SC/ST protection, and enhanced cognizability.


Key Facts & Data

  • Article 25(1): Freedom to profess, practise, and propagate religion — subject to public order, morality, and health.
  • Stanislaus v. State of MP (1977): Right to propagate does not include right to convert — upheld state anti-conversion laws.
  • States with anti-conversion laws: Odisha (1967), MP (1968, amended 2021), Chhattisgarh (2000), Gujarat (2003), Himachal Pradesh (2006, amended 2019), Uttarakhand (2018), Jharkhand (2017), UP (2021 Act, 2020 Ordinance).
  • Maharashtra: draft bill cleared by cabinet (2026) — up to 7 years' imprisonment proposed.
  • Prior permission requirement: 60 days' advance notice to District Magistrate (UP, Uttarakhand).
  • Enhanced penalty trigger: conversions involving women, minors, SC/ST communities.
  • Article 25(2)(b): State can regulate secular activities associated with religious practice.
  • Supreme Court Constitution Bench: 5-judge bench decided Stanislaus (1977).
  • Seventh Schedule: No explicit entry for religious conversion — states use public order (State List Entry 1).
  • Anti-Defection Law (Tenth Schedule) is NOT relevant here — applicable only to parliamentary proceedings.