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Faith Under Fire

The Christian community in India faces a serious threat under the Hindutva-driven government led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

By Sadia Memon | June 2026


IIn March 2026, the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) released its Annual Report 2026, urging the US government to designate India as a “Country of Particular Concern” for engaging in and tolerating systematic, ongoing and egregious violations of religious freedom. The report recommended sanctions against the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), a right-wing Hindu nationalist organization responsible for sowing the seeds of religious hatred towards non-Hindu communities, including Christians.

The USCIRF report also called for halting arms sales to India and imposing sanctions on the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) due to its involvement in transnational repression of minorities. USCIRF has consistently expressed concern over the abuses faced by Christians in India under the Modi regime, highlighting patterns of systemic discrimination and rights violations.

Christians, who constitute roughly 2.3 percent of India’s 1.48 billion population, are among the most vulnerable religious groups in the country. Despite representing a smaller proportion of the Indian population, they face increasing hostilities simply for practicing their faith. The UK-based Christian advocacy group known as Open Doors International, in its World Watch List 2026, ranked India 12th out of 50 countries where Christians face extreme persecution. Incidents of anti-Christian violence have increased sharply under the Modi-led BJP government. According to the United Christian Forum (UCF), an Indian Christian rights group, anti-Christian incidents increased from 300 in 2018 to 834 in 2024, marking a substantial rise.

One of the most alarming cases of atrocities against Christians is Manipur’s ethno-religious conflict. It erupted in May 2023, when violence by predominantly Meitei Hindu mobs against the Christian Kuki-Zo community devastated neighborhoods, destroyed churches, burned Christian homes and businesses, and killed dozens of people. In July 2023, the European Parliament adopted a resolution titled Resolution on India, the situation in Manipur calling on Indian authorities to take action to halt religious and ethnic violence in Manipur and urging political leaders to cease inflammatory statements.

According to the Human Rights Watch 2025 Report titled India: Ethnic Clashes Restart in Manipur, the violent clashes had killed over 260 people and displaced over 60,000 since May 2023. The report further mentioned that the then BJP government under Chief Minister Nongthombam Biren Singh was pro-Meitei and used divisive policies to promote Hindu majoritarianism in Manipur. The government, including the police, provided political protection to the Meitei militant groups, which looted weapons from state armories and engaged in attacks on the Kuki-Zo Christian community.

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