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		India PM Modi's party distances itself 
		from religious conversions 
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		[December 20, 2014] 
		By Aditya Kalra
 NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Indian Prime 
		Minister Narendra Modi's party said on Saturday it does not support 
		forceful religious conversions, distancing itself from a sensitive issue 
		that has drawn sharp criticism from opposition parties and hurt the 
		government's reform agenda.
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			 Modi has in recent weeks come under fire for being slow to rein in 
			his hardline affiliate groups that are allegedly trying to promote a 
			Hindu-dominant agenda by luring Muslims and Christians to convert to 
			Hinduism. 
 Critics say such groups undermine the secular foundations of 
			multi-faith India and have become more assertive since Modi's 
			Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) swept to power in May.
 
 "BJP is not supportive of any forceful conversions," party president 
			Amit Shah said, adding that his party was supportive of bringing in 
			an anti-conversion law.
 
 India's 1.2 billion people are predominantly Hindus, but the country 
			has about 160 million Muslims and a small proportion of Christians.
 
 Religious conversions are a hot button issue for Hindi nationalists 
			in India, which was colonized for centuries by Muslim and Christian 
			invaders. Some hardliners want the entire country to become a land 
			of Hindus.
 
			 Earlier this month, Muslim slum-dwellers complained they had been 
			tricked into a conversion ceremony by Hindu groups who attracted 
			them with promises of cheap government rations and voter identity 
			cards. Indian police are investigating the case.
 In another incident, a Hindu priest-turned-lawmaker of Modi's party 
			planned a conversion ceremony on Christmas Day, but canceled the 
			event after the prime minister intervened.
 
 Supporters define such events as a 'homecoming', saying families 
			signing up for the ceremonies were originally Hindus.
 
 "A police complaint has been registered against the so-called 
			homecoming program and the matter has reached the court. ... Let the 
			court decide if it was a forceful conversion or not," Shah said.
 
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			Modi's agenda to push through reforms to boost economic growth has 
			hit a roadblock in India's upper house of parliament, where 
			opposition lawmakers have demanded that the prime minister make a 
			statement on the contested conversions issue.
 The Hindu nationalist leader has so far refrained from doing so, and 
			has let his colleagues fend off criticism.
 
 "The BJP speaks with a forked tongue," national spokesman of the 
			opposition Congress party, Sanjay Jha, told Reuters, accusing the 
			BJP of using economic reform as a way to a camouflage its Hindu 
			agenda.
 
 (Reporting by Aditya Kalra; Editing by Crispian Balmer)
 
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