Violation of the provisions of the law would invite a jail term of not less than one year, extendable to five years, with a fine of ₹15,000. However, if a minor, a woman or a person belonging to the Scheduled Caste or Scheduled Tribes communities was converted through the said unlawful means, the jail term would be a minimum of three years and could be extended to 10 years with a fine of ₹25,000. In its election manifesto for the 2022 UP Assembly election, the BJP promised to increase the minimum punishment under the law to 10 years of imprisonment and Rs 1 lakh fine.
Ever since the law was enforced in the state, the police and administration have been in a hyper mode to criminalize inter-faith relationships especially involving Muslim men and Hindu women. In fact, such was the tearing hurry to implement the law that just a day after Governor Anandiben Patel promulgated it, police in Bareilly lodged the first case under it against a 21-year-old Muslim boy, an army aspirant, Uvaish Ahmad. He was arrested for allegedly trying to coerce a 20-year-old married Hindu woman to convert her to his religion and marry him. While Ahmad was booked under criminal intimidation, sections of the new ordinance were added to the printed FIR with a pen as the police system was not updated with the law.
Since then, the law has been used to harass couples and expose them to vigilantism. Take the case of a Dalit Hindu woman Pinki and her Muslim husband Rashid in Moradabad. In December 2020, Rashid and his brother were arrested under the law when they, along with Pinki, who was then pregnant, had reached the marriage registration office in Kanth, a town known for manufacturing gauze bandages, to get their marriage officially registered. Rashid, his brother and Pinki were handed over to the police by members of a Hindu right-wing outfit who opposed their marriage. They even heckled and shamed her. The police FIR was lodged on the complaint of Pinki’s mother, a resident of Bijnor, who accused Rashid of inducing and coercing her daughter into marriage to convert her. Rashid allegedly also concealed his Muslim identity from Pinki, her mother alleged. However, Pinki rubbished all allegations against her husband in front of the media and later in her statement before a magistrate. She stated that they had married in Dehradun in July 2020 through consent as both were adults. "I know the boy and what caste (community or religion) he belongs to. I know everything about him," Pinki had told Outlook then.
While police eventually dropped the case against Rashid and his brother, the episode proved to be a traumatic experience for Pinki and Rashid. After being forcibly handed over to police, Pinki was temporarily kept at a government-run women's shelter home where she reportedly suffered a miscarriage.
While the government is yet to officially release the current figures, a report by news agency ANI in November 2022, quoted an anonymous official as saying that in two years, police had arrested 507 persons in 291 cases of unlawful conversion. As per the detailed data shared by the government in court in August 2021, in the first 79 cases registered by police till July 2021, barring a handful, almost all were Muslim.
In Surajpur in Gautam Buddha Nagar, police had arrested four persons including three women – one of them a South Korean national, Minkaygali alias Anmol – on charges of using enticement to convert people to a different religion. The accused woman had alleged that the four had approached her during the COVID-19 lockdown and helped her with ration and money as she had no job or livelihood. However, she alleged that the accused later started inviting her to a temporary church in Malakpur every weekend, even sending a car to pick her up. She alleged they offered her more money and ration if she removed the images of Hindu gods and goddesses from her house. In another curious case, in September 2021, a Hindu Dalit man from Fatehpur Vijay Sonkar was arrested by police under the new anti-conversion law for trying to convert his Hindu wife to Islam.
The judiciary will decide the fate of the accused in specific cases — to date only one conviction has taken place under the new law in UP. However, what is undeniable is that the law has been used as a political instrument to intimidate a community and polarize opinion on communal lines.
Shashwat Anand, a lawyer in Allahabad High Court, who argued a PIL against the law in 2020 and 2021, says there has been a “landslide of reported cases of barbarous excesses at the hands of the police or vigilante mobs” since after passing of the law. “Such a law in the hands of our police (which is still governed by the Indian Police Act, 1861, modelled on the Irish colonial paramilitary police) is bound to become a weapon of harassment even against consenting couples/spouses. In such cases conversion is a concomitant of a valid marriage, ensuring benefits under the canopy of the respective personal law(s), namely, inheritance, maintenance, social acceptance, etc,” he said.