SRI JAYEWARDENEPURA KOTTE, Sri Lanka (ABP) — Religious-freedom advocates worry that an anti-conversion bill making its way through Sri Lanka’s Parliament could be used to justify discrimination against the nation’s Christian minority.
Groups including the National Christian Evangelical Alliance of Sri Lanka and the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty oppose the “Prevention of Forcible Conversion Bill,” which was discussed Oct. 23 by the Sri Lanka Legislative Standing Committee and appears headed to the floor of Parliament within the next few months.
Depending on how it’s interpreted or enforced, faith-based humanitarian groups fear the law could be used to crack down on all evangelism and encourage violence against evangelical Christians.
JHU, roughly translated in English as National Heritage Party, has sought an anti-conversion bill since 2002. The pending bill, which has government support, has been held up in a committee since 2006 due to constitutional problems.
Fundamentalist Buddhists have long pressured the government to address the “problem” of the growth of Christian churches in rural areas. They accuse Christian organizations of using aid to entice or coerce vulnerable people to change their religion and claim that such conversions jeopardize the nation’s Buddhist identity.
JHU leader Omalpe Sobhitha Thero has been quoted as saying the two greatest threats facing Sri Lanka are the Tamil Tigers — a militant secessionist group branded a terrorist organization by 31 countries, including the United States — and U.S.-funded Christian missionaries.
Anti-missionary sentiment intensified following the 2004 tsunami, which brought an influx of foreign Christian aid workers, some set on proselytizing.
Sri Lanka’s Constitution accords Buddhism a “foremost place” but does not formally recognize it as a state religion. Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court, however, has endorsed discrimination against non-Buddhist organizations and stated the growth of Christianity threatens not only the primacy of Buddhism, but its very existence.
The constitution gives members of other faiths a right to freely practice their religion, but the U.S. State Department has raised concerns about sporadic attacks on Christian communities. Some groups allege that the government has tacitly condoned harassment and attacks against Christians by inadequately enforcing the law.
Sri Lanka’s population of 19 million is 70 percent Buddhist, 15 percent Hindu, 8 percent Muslim and about 7 percent Christian. Despite concern by some Buddhists about losing ground to Christianity in rural areas, the Becket Fund says the sizes of the various religious populations have been consistent for decades.
A forwarded e-mail reportedly from a Sri Lankan pastor expresses fear that, if passed, the law could be used to imprison pastors who share their faith and believers who convert to Christianity from other faiths. The message also anticipates faith-based aid organiztions like World Vision being forced to leave Sri Lanka if the law takes effect.
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Bob Allen ([email protected]) is senior writer for Associated Baptist Press.
Read more:
Anti-conversion bill in Sri Lanka could restrict liberty, relief work (4/1/2005)