The Allahabad High Court

The Allahabad High Court recently said that
basic object and reason of enforcement of the U.P. Prohibition of Unlawful
Conversion of Religion Act, 2021 was to guarantee religious freedom to all
persons. The objective of this Act was to sustain the spirit of secularism
in India, said the court.
The bench of Justice Rohit Ranjan Agarwal
emphasised that according to the Constitution, the State has no religion, all
religions are equal before it and no religion shall be given preference
over the other.
"All persons are free to preach, practice
and propagate any religion of their choice," it pointed out while
stressing that the individual right to freedom of conscience and religion
cannot be extended to construe a collective right to proselytize.
"The right to religious freedom belongs
equally to the person converting and the individual sought to be
converted," court asserted.
The observations were made by the court while
dealing with a bail application in an unlawful religious conversion case.
The accused namely Ajeem is facing
charges under Sections 323, 504, 506 of the IPC and Section 3/5(1) of the
U.P. Prohibition of Unlawful Conversion of Religion Act, 2021. The case against
him is that he made videos of the victim girl and blackmailed her with
those to sexually exploit her. Apart from that, allegedly Azeem pressured the
girl to marry him. As per the girl, she was kept in captivity and was forced to
accept Islam. She was also asked to eat non-vegetarian food and to wear clothes
worn by Muslims, she claimed.
The counsel representing Azeem argued that he
had been falsely implicated in the present case and in fact, the girl was
in love with him. He referred to another earlier FIR where the girl had stated
that she had solemnized marriage with Azeem.
On the other hand, the Additional Government
Advocate opposed the bail plea contending that the statement of the girl
which was recorded under Section 164 CrPC clearly revealed that without
any conversion, her Nikah ceremony was performed with Azeem, and the girl had
stated that on the day of Bakrid, her father-in-law asked her to watch how
sacrifice was given, which she had refused.
The high court noted that the victim girl
had maintained the FIR version in her statement recorded under Section 164
CrPC.
More importantly, court pointed out that the
accused could not bring on record any material to demonstrate that any
application was moved under Section 8 of the Act of 2021 for getting the
girl converted into Islam before the marriage/Nikah took place, as alleged
between him and the girl.
Therefore, while noting that in the present
case, there was a contravention of Sections 3 and 8 of the Act of 2021, which
is punishable under Section 5 of the Act of 2021, court held that no case for
bail was made out by the accused.
Accordingly, court rejected the bail plea.