Religious minorities in India have reported increased discrimination and violence since Narendra Modi took office in 2014. The pope wants to make an official trip to the South Asian nation, but has so far been shunned.
Pope Francis (right) is expected to call on Indian PM Narendra Modi to take tougher action to stop religious violence
The first meeting between Pope Francis and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Rome this weekend is being tipped as a potential thorny encounter.
Francis will receive Modi at the Vatican on Saturday amid accusations of increasing levels of discrimination against religious minorities in India since the Hindu nationalist politician took office in 2014.
The pope is also expected to prepare the ground for a long-awaited official visit to India, which, according to Catholic media, is being held up by Modi's refusal to set a date.
The last time a pope visited India's nearly 28 million Christians was in 1999.
Modi stokes divisions
India's population of 1.4 billion is made up of various ethnicities and religions. While the country has long been plagued by communal tensions, Modi and his Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) are accused of fueling a rise in discrimination and violence toward people of other religions.
While Muslims, who make up around 14% of the population, have borne the brunt, Christians, who account for just over 2%, have also reported a rise in reported violent attacks.
More than 300 violent incidents have been recorded this year, according to a report by a group of NGOs released this month, under the pretext that Christians are seeking to forcibly convert Hindus.
The report said Christians face persecution from Hindu nationalist groups in 21 of the 28 states, most of them ruled by the BJP.
Christianity is India's third-largest religion after Hinduism and Islam, with approximately 27.8 million followers
The recent violence includes an attack earlier this month on a Christian prayer house in the northern state of Uttarakhand, which the local head of the BJP accused of holding "suspicious gatherings."
In March, a mob of Hindu radicals in the central state of Chhattisgarh attacked around 150 people in a church with axes, stones and wooden clubs. Eight people were seriously injured, according to reports.
In August in the same state, a mob of around 100 people beat up a pastor and vandalized his house. A month later, a crowd forced their way into a police station and assaulted a priest who was being questioned.
Catholic bishops demand end to violence
In recent days, Catholic bishops in India have demanded that the national and state governments take firm action against increasing persecution and violence against Christians.
At least three states run by the BJP have passed legislation aimed at preventing "forced conversion," and dozens of people have been arrested. Others plan to follow suit including the southern state of Karnataka, where priests have come out in protest.
The archbishop emeritus of Guwahati, Thomas Menamparampil, recently described the Hindu nationalist or Hindutva movement as "a vicious form of nationalism."
In the online magazine Indian Currents, he wrote that Hindutva and BJP along with powerful businessmen, "have developed the art of using religious and cultural symbols to mobilize crowds to win elections and promote their own interests."
The national debate now revolves exclusively around "what this club considers important: not development and welfare, but profits and privilege," Menamparampil added.
Modi's government has rejected having a Hindu agenda and insists that people of all religions have equal rights.
After the G20 gathering, Modi is due to leave for Glasgow to attend the COP26 climate summit.
mm/sri (AFP, KNA)
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