Indian Church refuses to endorse political party in election
Assam Christians outraged by Hindu leader’s “divisive” remarks
Moral theologians address challenges in biomedical ethics in India
Persecution of Christians has worsened around the globe, according to new study
Pope to Cardinals-elect: Keep your eyes raised, your hands joined, your feet bare
Tribal Christians avoid travel fearing attack in India’s Manipur
Pope Francis’ visit to Singapore ‘has revived the faith of our people,’ cardinal says
Cardinal Dolan: Harris received ‘bad advice’ to skip Catholic charity dinner
A group Catholic priests and nuns working among the poorest and most marginalized communities in Maharashtra has opposed the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) as unconstitutional.
“The CAA is the first instance of religion being overtly used as criterion for citizenship under Indian nationality laws and therefore fundamentally discriminatory and divisive in nature,” says a press release from 36 representatives of 16 Catholic congregations that oppose the act.
The group called Justice Coalition of Religious that met in Mumbai recently also opposed National Population Register (NPR) and National Register of Citizens (NRC).
They said these laws are at odds with secular principles enshrined in the Constitution and contradict Articles 13, 14, 15, 16 and 21 that guarantee to every citizen the right to equality, equality before the law, and non-discriminatory treatment by the State.
The group attended on January 16-18 a capacity-building workshop titled, “Rights-based Advocacy in relation to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG).”
These religious work with urban and rural poor, Dalits and Adivasis, street children, women in prostitution, homeless populations, persons with disabilities and other poor and marginalized communities.
“As citizens deeply committed to a just and rights-based implementation of the SDGs, we strongly oppose the Citizenship Amendment Act as unconstitutional and therefore counterproductive with respect to SDG 16,” their statement asserts.
It expresses their deep concern about the negative fallout the proposed all-India-level National Population Register (NPR) and National Register of Citizens (NRC) will have on the people of the country, “disproportionately harming the poor, vulnerable, and marginalized and thereby nullifying efforts toward SDG 10 among others.”
Leave a Comment