City
Epaper

Demand for anti-conversion law echoes on last day of Bihar Budget Session

By IANS | Updated: February 27, 2026 14:40 IST

Patna, Feb 27 The issue of enacting stricter laws against religious conversion resonated in the Bihar Legislative Assembly ...

Open in App

Patna, Feb 27 The issue of enacting stricter laws against religious conversion resonated in the Bihar Legislative Assembly on the final day of the Budget Session, as several ruling party members raised the matter through a calling attention motion.

Eighteen MLAs from the ruling alliance, including Maithili Thakur, Mithilesh Tiwari, Virendra Kumar, Janak Singh, Sanjay Kumar Singh, Jivesh Kumar, Tar Kishore Prasad and Baidyanath Prasad, spoke on the issue, calling for a law similar to those enacted in other states.

The MLAs stated that states such as Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Uttarakhand, and Gujarat have implemented laws against religious conversion.

According to them, these laws provide for stringent punishment, including imprisonment ranging from one to 10 or even 20 years in cases involving alleged fraudulent conversion, child marriage, or inducement.

Members also claimed that demographic changes in certain parts of Bihar warranted legislative intervention.

They alleged that religious conversions were being carried out on a large scale and expressed concern over the situation in border districts and the Seemanchal region.

Mithilesh Tiwari, MLA from the Bharatiya Janata Party, said, “Uttar Pradesh has strict laws, and a similar law should be enacted in Bihar. In Buxar alone, 1,000 Dalit families have converted. The demographics of Seemanchal have changed. Therefore, this law is needed; the government should consider it.”

Some MLAs cited figures regarding population growth and the establishment of churches in the state, alleging that conversions were taking place through inducement.

BJP MLA Sanjay Singh termed it not just religious conversion, but national conversion, while another member, Anil Singh, demanded strict legislation to curb the practice.

Certain members also raised questions about reservation benefits following religious conversion and referred to constitutional provisions in their arguments.

Responding to the debate, Tourism and Arts & Culture Minister Arun Shankar Prasad clarified that the Bihar government currently has no proposal to introduce legislation related to religious conversion.

“There is no proposal to enact any legislation related to this at this time,” the minister stated in the House.

When some BJP members continued to press the issue, Assembly Speaker Prem Kumar intervened, stating that the calling attention motion had been admitted and that the government would review the matter if necessary. He ruled that there would be no further discussion on the issue.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketIPL 2026: Why Varun Chakaravarthy Is Not Playing in Today’s Kolkata Knight Riders vs Lucknow Super Giants? EXPLAINED

InternationalIndia, Bhutan discuss strengthening energy security and hydropower cooperation

InternationalPakistan's current response to TB insufficient as cases continue to rise: Report

Other SportsNavneet to lead in Salima’s absence as Indian women's hockey team departs for Argentina series

HealthPakistan's current response to TB insufficient as cases continue to rise: Report

National Realted Stories

NationalRajasthan Police arrest mastermind in Rs 12.69 crore fraud​

NationalDelhi L-G, CM urge young graduates to focus on Viksit Bharat@2047​

NationalBihar liquor crackdown: Arrested accused dies during treatment in East Champaran

NationalBaramati bypoll: 23 candidates in fray including Sunetra Pawar

NationalK’taka Congress defends Kharge’s ‘poisonous snake’ remark