Why Chhattisgarh strengthened its anti-conversion framework
June 14, 2026
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Home Politics

Chhattisgarh Anti-Conversion Law: Balancing religious freedom and protection from exploitation

The Chhattisgarh Dharm Swatantrata Adhiniyam, 2026 is seeking to curb religious conversions allegedly carried out through coercion, fraud, inducement, or psychological manipulation while safeguarding the fundamental right of every individual to choose and practise a faith of their own free will

Advocate Karan ThakurAdvocate Karan Thakur
Jun 14, 2026, 02:10 pm IST
in Politics, Bharat, Chhattisgarh
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Religious freedom cannot become a shield for coercion, deception or exploitation. The Chhattisgarh Dharm Swatantrata Adhiniyam, 2026 seeks to protect genuine freedom of conscience while preventing manipulative conversions carried out under the guise of faith.

The Chhattisgarh Dharm Swatantrata Adhiniyam, 2026 represents an important constitutional and social intervention in the ongoing debate surrounding religious conversion in India. While Articles 25 and 26 of the Constitution guarantee every individual the freedom of conscience and the right to profess, practise and propagate religion, these freedoms were never intended to legitimise coercion, deception or organised exploitation carried out in the name of faith. The Constitution protects voluntary and informed religious choice, not conversion achieved through fear, inducement, fraudulent claims or psychological manipulation. It is this crucial constitutional distinction that forms the legal and moral foundation of the Chhattisgarh legislation. Judicial precedents, including Rev. Stainislaus v. State of Madhya Pradesh, have clarified that the right to “propagate” does not include the right to convert another person by force or deceit.

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The debate surrounding anti-conversion laws is often reduced to a simplistic conflict between religious liberty and State regulation. However, the realities on the ground are far more complex. In several economically vulnerable and socially marginalised regions, particularly among tribal communities, Scheduled Castes and weaker sections of society, instances have emerged where religious influence is intertwined with promises of employment, healthcare, miracle healing, education, financial assistance or social mobility. In such circumstances, the issue before the State is not whether an individual may change religion, but whether such a decision is genuinely free, informed and free from external pressure or inducement.

The recent judgment arising from the Gariyaband district of Chhattisgarh serves as a disturbing reminder of the dangers associated with exploitative religious practices operating without scrutiny. The case involved the death of an 18-year-old Scheduled Caste girl who was subjected to severe physical abuse under the guise of ritualistic healing. Evidence before the Court revealed horrifying acts including pouring hot oil and water upon the victim and physically assaulting her as part of a so-called spiritual cure. Medical testimony confirmed that the victim suffered grave internal injuries which ultimately resulted in her death. Witness statements further suggested that the family was discouraged from seeking external help and was psychologically pressured through threats of divine displeasure.

Significantly, the Court observed that blind faith and manipulative spiritual claims had been used to exercise control over the victim and her family. The judgment treated the acts not merely as isolated assault, but as part of a pattern of exploitative conduct carried out under the cloak of religious intervention and superstition. The Court ultimately convicted the accused under multiple statutory provisions, including the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, the Chhattisgarh Tonhi Pratarna Nivaran Act, the Drugs and Magic Remedies Act and the Chhattisgarh Dharm Swatantrata Adhiniyam, 2026. The imposition of life imprisonment reflected the seriousness with which the judiciary viewed the intersection of coercive religious influence, superstition and criminal violence.

The significance of the case extends beyond one criminal prosecution. It reflects a broader structural concern where vulnerable individuals may become trapped within a network of superstition, emotional control, fraudulent healing practices and coercive religious influence. Such incidents raise serious constitutional and ethical questions regarding the boundary between genuine religious freedom and organised exploitation. A democratic State committed to protecting individual dignity cannot remain indifferent when faith becomes a mechanism of manipulation rather than conscience.

Critics of anti-conversion laws have frequently argued that such legislations may be misused or may interfere with legitimate religious activity. These concerns deserve careful consideration because every law affecting civil liberties must be implemented with fairness, restraint and accountability. However, the possibility of misuse cannot by itself invalidate the constitutional legitimacy of regulation. Every fundamental right operates within reasonable restrictions intended to protect public order, dignity and individual autonomy. The answer to misuse lies in balanced enforcement and judicial oversight, not in the complete absence of safeguards.

The Chhattisgarh Dharm Swatantrata Adhiniyam, 2026 must therefore be understood not as a prohibition upon religious choice, but as a regulatory framework intended to ensure transparency, accountability and genuine consent in matters relating to religious conversion. The legislation attempts to distinguish voluntary acceptance of faith from conversions facilitated through coercion, fraudulent claims, organised inducements or exploitative practices targeting vulnerable populations. In doing so, the State seeks to uphold both constitutional liberty and social justice.

Ultimately, the larger constitutional question concerns the meaning of genuine freedom itself. Religious liberty cannot be meaningful where consent is distorted by fear, poverty, emotional dependency or manipulation masquerading as spirituality. A constitutional democracy must protect both the individual’s right to faith and the individual’s right to remain free from exploitation committed in the name of faith. The Gariyaband judgment stands as a grim reminder that unchecked practices disguised as spiritual intervention can escalate into criminal violence and even loss of life.

Religious liberty remains meaningful only when faith is shaped by free conscience and not by fear, fraud or manipulation. The Chhattisgarh Dharm Swatantrata Adhiniyam, 2026 ultimately represents an attempt to balance constitutional freedom with the State’s duty to protect vulnerable individuals from exploitation carried out in the name of religion.

Topics: Chhattisgarh Dharm Swatantrata AdhiniyamForced ConversionChhattisgarh anti conversion lawGariyaband districtChhattisgarh Tonhi Pratarna Nivaran Act
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