Talking to reporters in the Maharashtra legislature complex here on Tuesday, Fadnavis said there was a "feeling" in the House regarding the Shraddha Walker case that instances of "love jihad" were seen at a large scale in the state.
"Love jihad" is a term often used by right-wing activists to allege a ploy by Muslim men to lure Hindu women into religious conversion through marriage.
“We have assured (the House) that different states have laws on love jihad and we will study them. Based on it, our government will take an appropriate decision so that no woman or girl suffers by any conspiracy,” said Fadnavis, who holds the Home portfolio.
In the Assembly, he said there is a demand for a tough law on "love jihad".
The state government is not opposed to inter-faith marriages, Fadnavis said.
“But it has been realised over time that there is a design as part of a conspiracy. In some districts such marriages are taking place in big numbers,” he said.
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) MLAs Atul Bhatkhalkar and Ashish Shelar raised in the Lower House the issue of killing of Shraddha Walkar.
Speaking on Walkar withdrawing a complaint of harassment she had filed against her live-in partner Aaftab Poonawala with Vasai police in November 2020, Bhatkhalkar said, "Was there political pressure on the police not to act when they received the complaint?"