Assam government tables bill to ban ‘magical healing’

Last week, Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma had claimed that the bill would be an important milestone towards curbing evangelism.

Feb 22, 2024 - 02:00
Assam government tables bill to ban ‘magical healing’

The Assam government on Wednesday introduced a new bill in the state Assembly to ban “magical healing”, PTI reported.

Parliamentary Affairs Minister Pijush Hazarika tabled the Assam Healing (Prevention of Evil) Practices Bill, 2024, in the 126-member state Assembly on behalf of Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma. The proposed legislation aims to eliminate “non-scientific healing practices used with malicious intent to exploit innocent individuals”, The Hindu reported.

The state Cabinet had on February 10 given its nod to introduce the bill in the Assembly. Sarma alleged that purported magical healing practices were being conducted to carry out religious conversions among tribal people.

“We are going to pilot this bill because we believe the religious status quo is very important for a proper balance,” the chief minister said on February 13.

The chief minister said that the bill would be an important milestone to curb evangelism in Assam. “Whoever is Muslim, should remain Muslim,” he said. “Whoever is Christian, should remain Christian. And whoever is Hindu, let them remain Hindu so that a proper balance can be achieved in our state.”

The Assam Christian Forum had on February 15 termed the chief minister’s statement equating “magical healing” with proselytisation as misguided and misleading.

“Healing, in our context, is not synonymous with proselytisation,” the...

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