On May 6, Parliament gave preliminary approval to the Prohibition of Forced Conversions bill and referred it to a standing committee. The committee may amend the bill before it comes up for an anticipated vote later this year.
Proposed by the radical Jathika Hela Urumaya, a party formed last year by Buddhist monks, the bill ostensibly bans religious conversions by force or "allurement." Such initiatives come at a time when Christians are engaged in providing aid to the tsunami victims and earning widespread goodwill. Christians say the pending bill would make them cautious in engaging in any relief or social service for fear of seeming to "allure" people into Christian faith. In a protest rally on May 7, more than 2,500 Catholics and Protestants gathered to oppose any anticonversion laws.
"As a minority group that has come under violent attacks, the Christian community will be very insecure, as they [could] be hauled before the court on false allegations or fabricated evidence," Roshini Wickremesinhe of the National Christian Evangelical Alliance of Sri Lanka told CT. "The bill will send a clear message that there is legal sanction for persecuting Christians."
Last year, Sri Lanka's supreme court ruled that certain clauses in an earlier anti-conversion bill were unconstitutional.
News elsewhere about Sri Lanka's anti-conversion bill includes:
Controversy over Freedom of Religion Bill: Buddhists to meet UN envoy today | Representatives of Buddhist organizations are scheduled to meet visiting UN Special Rapporteur on Religious Freedom Asma Jahangir today (May 3) in the wake of mounting Christian evangelist pressure against the proposed Freedom of Religion Bill that is aimed at preventing unethical conversions. (AsianTribune, May 03, 2005)
The Joy of Suffering in Sri Lanka | How Christians thrive in the land where ethnic and religious strife is always just around the corner. (Sept. 29, 2003)