Hindu radicals in Nepal 'warn all foreign Christian religious leaders to leave this country'
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
"We warn all foreign Christian religious leaders to leave this country immediately and we invite all those who have been converted to Christianity and have become Christian religious leaders to return to their ancestral religion."
By ACN staff
NEW YORK—Requesting anonymity, Catholic sources in
Nepal have told international Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need about growing
fears within the country’s small Christian population about their future safety
in Nepal.
In the early hours of Sept. 14, 2015, three Protestant churches were bombed in
eastern Nepal where the Christian population is most numerous; there were no
deaths though a few people were wounded. One of the bombs placed at a local
church failed to detonate, but it exploded later at the police station injuring
four police officers who were trying to diffuse it. The incidents occurred just a few hours before a vote reaffirming Nepal to be a
secular country—rejecting a Constitutional amendment proposed Nepal’s Rastriya
Prajatantra Party, which seeks to reestablish the country as a Hindu nation.

No group has claimed responsibility for the
incident, but suspicion for the church attacks fell on extremist Hindus as
pamphlets associated with the radical Hindu Morcha Nepal group were found at
the scene. The pamphlets accuse the Nepalese government of being under the
control of foreign agents and countries, while blaming Christianity for leading
the country into religious and ethnic conflict.
Vowing to block foreign Christian leaders and
personnel from entering Nepal, the Hindu Morcha Nepal pamphlets stated: “We
warn all foreign Christian religious leaders to leave this country immediately
and we invite all those who have been converted to Christianity and have become
Christian religious leaders to return to their ancestral religion,” which is
Hinduism. The police are investigating the incidents.
Nepal’s political landscape is tense. The
promulgation of the Nepal’s new Constitution on Sept. 20, 2015—the first to be
written by elected government officials—affirms Nepal as a federal democratic
republic adhering to secular values. The majority of Nepalese celebrated by
lighting candles and participating in processions.
Some political parties, however, representing ethnic
minorities from Nepal’s southern and western plains bordering India, are
unhappy about provincial boundaries, with grievances sparking violent protests
that have continued for more than two weeks. To-date, more than 40 people have
lost their lives in the unrest.
A source close to Nepal’s tiny Catholic Church said:
“We are praying and hoping that no more churches will be vandalized or bombed, as
the new Constitution is in favor of secularism. Meanwhile we are committed to
continue our relief efforts to help the neediest people of Nepal,” many of whom
are still coping with the aftermath of Nepal’s massive earthquake that killed
9,000 people on April 25, 2015.
Earthquake damage in Nepal; ACN photo
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