By Michael Ireland, Senior Reporter, ASSIST News Service answriternmike@gmail.com
NEW DELHI, INDIA (ANS, August 1, 2015) -- Morning Star News http://morningstarnews.org
reports that sources say after watching idly as a mob of Hindu
extremists dragged Christians from a prayer meeting in West Delhi and
beat them, police questioned those who were attacked as if they were
guilty of fraudulent conversion.
According to its New Delhi
Correspondent, a mob said to be members of the Hindu extremist Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) stormed the prayer meeting in Nangloi, Nihal
Vihar on July 18 and beat them, leaving one Christian with a damaged
eardrum, they said. Police watched without intervening, and initially
officers refused to register a case against the assailants, Christian
leaders said.
Morning Star News says that
three pastors had gathered at the home of Ayaid Prasad to pray for his
sick daughter when about 15 Hindu extremists accused them of forceful
conversion as they burst in with clubs at about 4 p.m. They shouted at
the Christians to stop the meeting and beat Pastor Harchand Singh and
two guest pastors from Kerala, Pastor Singh said.
The news agency said West Delhi
is an administrative district of the National Capital Territory of
Delhi. Also present at the prayer meeting were 13 other Christians.
“They pulled us out from the
house to the road and beat us up where another 50 extremists were
waiting,” Pastor Singh of Shalom Mission told Morning Star News.
The news outlet reported the
owner of the house tried to tell the Hindu extremists that the pastors
had come at his invitation, and that they had witnessed improvement in
his daughter’s health after prayer, but the assailants continued to
kick, punch, slap and beat the church leaders with clubs, Pastor Singh
said.
The attackers claimed that
Prasad’s family had been forcefully converted to Christianity, said A.C.
Michael, former member of the Delhi Minorities Commission, according to
the news outlet’s website and an email report obtained by ASSIST News.
“The extremists claimed that
Prasad now put up the picture of Jesus in his house, and they angrily
demanded to know why he took off the picture of Hindu god Hanuman from
his house,” Michael told Morning Star News.
Police took Pastor Singh and the two other pastors to the police station, the pastor said.
“The police asked us
uncomfortable questions, like how much money we offered to people to
convert them to Christianity,” Pastor Singh said.
Attorney Pramod Singh of the
Christian Legal Association (CLA) said police released the pastors at
about 9 p.m., claiming that they had kept them in custody for their own
protection.
When another pastor, Rajan
Gill, led a group of Christians to the police station to help the
pastors in custody, the Hindu extremists beat them there, Pastor Gill
said.
“Hurling verbal abused against
us, about 15 extremists rushed towards me and started to push, kick and
slap me, and they tore my shirt and beat me up,” he said. “When one
church member, Ranjinder Masih, came to defend me, he was mercilessly
beaten up.” They beat Masih, age 36, for about 15 minutes before police
intervened, he said.
“The police simply told the
crowd that they have beaten us enough, and that they will take us inside
the police station now,” Pastor Gill said. “I asked one police officer
why they did not intervene when the mob beat us up right in front of the
police station. He replied that it was not his duty to intervene
outside the police station.”
Pastor Gill sustained bruises
and abrasions on his body. Masih suffered a serious eardrum injury as
well as wounds on his face and neck, Pastor Gill said.
Morning Star News stated that
after about 400 Christians staged a protest in front of the police
station against police inaction the next day, police filed a First
Information Report (FIR) against the assailants.
“The police on duty seem to
have a soft side for the attackers, and it was only when we approached
the Additional Commissioner of Police that a case was registered against
the attackers of Pastor Harchand Singh,” attorney Singh of CLA told
Morning Star News.
The Station House Officer of Nihal Vihar, Sharad Chandra, refused to comment on the case to Morning Star News.The news outlet reported that Michael said the Delhi Minorities Commission is submitting a memorandum to the lieutenant governor of Delhi demanding justice and prompt police action.
“One police inspector from the
special branch did not talk like a police officer, but like that of an
RSS member, and we were deeply saddened that the police were mute
spectators of the beating and the utterance of their duty not pertaining
outside,” Michael said.
Attacks in the Area
Morning Star News explained
that the same anti-Christian elements in the area have been harassing
pastor Praveen Kumar of New Life Fellowship since March of last year.
The news group said that in
March 2014, church members from New Life Fellowship were on a bus to
attend an evangelistic convention when local leaders Vinod Singh, Sanjay
Sharma and Om Pal led RSS members in stopping them and slapping some of
them, Kumar said.
A police complaint was filed, but no action was taken, he said.
“I have been to the police
station at least four times, but police did not take any action,” Pastor
Kumar told Morning Star News. “They made the excuse of not being able
to identify the culprits. However, I told them many times that I can
help them in identifying the people who troubled us, and I have even
mentioned the names of the attackers, but they refused to comply.”
Singh of the CLA said the police investigation has been inadequate, the news outlet reported.
“It is sad that the police did
not take corrective actions, and that there was no proper investigation
into the matter,” Singh said. “The police inaction has emboldened the
behavior of the extremists in the area.”
The Morning Star News outlet
further explained that every Sunday from mid-August to September last
year, RSS members using loud speakers held meetings opposite the school
hall where New Life Fellowship worshipped, according to its sources.
“The RSS clad in their uniforms
stopped some church members on their way to the church and chased them
back to their homes,” Pastor Kumar said. “They teased and uttered vulgar
words to the ladies from our church and deliberately offered prasad
[food offered to idols] when the congregation came out from the church.”
Christians submitted police complaints nearly every Sunday, but no action was taken, he said.
“The Station House Officer at
that time was B.R. Sangla, and every time we asked for his help, he said
that we were the ones creating trouble, and he threatened to lock us
up,” Pastor Kumar said. “Finally, one member of the National Minority
Commission, Abraham M. Patiani, helped us out by addressing our issue to
the Deputy Commissioner of Police, who told the anti-Christian people
not to bother us again.”
About the Writer: Michael Ireland is
a Senior Correspondent for the ASSIST News Service, as well as a
volunteer Internet Journalist and Ordained Minister who has served with
ASSIST Ministries and ASSIST News Service since its beginning in 1989.
He has reported for ANS from Jamaica, Mexico, Nicaragua, Israel, Jordan,
China, and Russia. Click http://paper.li/Michael_ASSIST/1410485204 to see a daily digest of Michael's stories for ANS.
** You may republish this and any of ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net)
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