
Kerala nuns held in Chhattisgarh for alleged religious conversion, bishops' group calls case ‘false'
The nuns – Preeti Mary and Vandana Francis – are members of the Assisi Sisters of Mary Immaculate, a congregation under the Syro-Malabar Church in Alappuzha district's Cherthala town and were working at a hospital in Agra, Mathrubhumi reported.
The two nuns and the man, identified as Sukhman Mandavi, were accompanying three women from Chhattisgarh's Narayanpur district.
Sebastian Poomattam, vicar general of the Raipur Archdiocese, told The News Minute that the nuns were taking the women to Agra where they had been offered jobs of kitchen helpers at a convent.
'They had the consent letters from their parents and were all above 18 years of age,' he added.
While at the railway station, a ticket examiner questioned the group on the platform.
'The girls and one man entered the platform where the nuns were waiting,' The News Minute quoted Poomattam as saying. 'The examiner asked about their tickets, and they said the nuns had them.'
The vicar general claimed that the examiner informed members of the Hindutva group Bajrang Dal about the situation and that the outfit's members 'arrived in large numbers within minutes'.
The police detained the nuns, the man and the three women.
The Bajrang Dal vigilantes protested at the police station and demanded the registration of a first information report against the nuns, The News Minute reported.
The nuns and Mandavi were remanded to judicial custody till August 8. They were charged under sections of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita pertaining to human trafficking and sections of Chhattisgarh Religious Freedom Act.
The three women were taken to a government-run shelter home.
Unidentified police officers told the Hindustan Times that the nuns were allegedly taking the women to Agra with the promise of 'good facilities and a monthly salary of Rs 8,000 to Rs 10,000'.
The police had reached the railway station based on a tip-off from members of the Bajrang Dal, the officers were quoted as having said.
'When questioned, the women said that initially they were told they would be offered jobs within Chhattisgarh, but when they reached Durg, they were told that the nuns had come to take them to Agra,' the newspaper quoted the officers as saying.
Commenting on the incident, the Catholic Bishops' Conference of India alleged that a ' false ' case had been filed against the nuns under the influence of Hindutva groups, Onmanorama reported.
The bishops' conference sought the intervention of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah in the matter.
Kerala CM seeks PM's intervention
Kerala Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan on Sunday also sought Modi's intervention in ensuring justice to the two nuns, PTI reported.
In a letter to the prime minister, the chief minister said that Mary and Francis were arrested when they had gone to receive women who were coming to work in their convent.
Family members of the two nuns have claimed that they had not been able to communicate with them after they were taken into custody, he added.
Vijayan requested the prime minister to intervene in the matter and ensure transparent and fair proceedings, PTI reported.
Alappuzha MP KC Venugopal said on Sunday that attacks on minorities had seen 'a rampant increase under BJP-ruled states, be it Chhattisgarh, Odisha or MP [Madhya Pradesh]'.
The Congress leader said that he had written to the Union home ministry and Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Vishnu Deo Sai demanding strict punishment against the culprits and the urgent need to uphold the Constitution 'so that fundamental rights of minorities are not threatened under their rule'.
'The latest attacks by Bajrang Dal goons on 2 Catholic nuns in Durg, Chhattisgarh point to a tacit support for such hate crimes from the ruling establishment,' Venugopal said on social media.
In his letter to the home ministry and the Chhattisgarh chief minister, Venugopal said that it was 'deeply disturbing that self proclaimed vigilantes can instigate communal tension and make baseless accusations of conversion and trafficking without any legal foundation'.
He added: 'Despite clear documentation and parental consent, the authorities have chosen to keep the nuns and the man in custody, reportedly under political pressure.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New Indian Express
39 minutes ago
- New Indian Express
Man held in Ghaziabad 26 years after jumping parole for murdering kid in 1993
NEW DELHI: A man convicted of kidnapping and murdering an eight-year-old boy in 1993 has been arrested by the Delhi Police Crime Branch after evading the law for over 26 years, an official said on Sunday. The accused, Raj Kishore (55), alias Bade Lalla, a resident of Kanpur Dehat in Uttar Pradesh, was convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment in 1996 for the brutal murder of a businessman's son. 'He was granted six-week parole by the Delhi High Court in 1999 but never returned to prison,' said DCP (Crime) Sanjeev Kumar Yadav. Declared a proclaimed offender in 2014, Kishore was finally apprehended from Ghaziabad's Khoda Colony on August 2, police said. According to police, on December 28, 1993, Kishore and his associate abducted the son of a garment factory owner in Kalyanpuri, demanded Rs 30,000 ransom, then killed the child and dumped the body in a drain. Kishore had been lodged in Tihar Jail before he jumped parole. He stayed in Patna, Jaipur, and Barnala under fake identities, eventually settling in Kanpur during the COVID-19 pandemic and running a tailoring business. A special team tracked him over two months and arrested him in Ghaziabad after a planned operation. His associate had already completed his sentence.


New Indian Express
39 minutes ago
- New Indian Express
Three nabbed for robbing Rs 15 lakh pension money in Andhra's ASR
VISAKHAPATNAM: G Madugula and Munchingiput police arrested three individuals for allegedly robbing Rs 15.62 lakh from a Welfare Assistant in Bangarumetta panchayat of Munchingiput mandal, Alluri Sitharama Raju district. ASR SP Amit Bardar, addressing a press meet, said the incident occurred on July 31 around 5 PM. The victim, Kattari Machchebabu, a Welfare Assistant from Pedabayalu mandal, had withdrawn Rs 15.62 lakh from the SBI branch in Pedabayalu to disburse pensions to senior citizens on August 1. While returning, he was intercepted near Bangarumetta by unidentified persons wielding knives, who robbed him and fled on a scooter. Following the complaint filed at Munchingiput Police Station, SP Amit formed special teams under the supervision of DSP Paderu Shaik Shahbaz Ahmed. Sub-Inspectors from Munchingiput, Araku, and Pedabayalu were roped in for a coordinated search. On August 2, police received information and spotted three individuals sharing a large amount of cash near Jolaput village in Munchingiput mandal. G Madugula CI B Srinivas Rao and Munchingiput SI J Ramakrishna arrested them. The accused were Santosh Kumar Mahapatra (28), Vikas Kora (25), and Swapnil Durai (19), all from Koraput district in Odisha. They confessed to executing the robbery to make easy money.


News18
an hour ago
- News18
Teenager Jumps To Death From Hill In Maharashtra After Mother Refuses To Buy Phone For Him
Last Updated: Such instances have been reported lately in Maharashtra, where teenagers have died by suicide after the parents denied their request to buy a phone. A teenage boy jumped off a hill to death in Maharashtra's Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar after his mother denied his request to get him a new mobile phone on Sunday, officials said. The 16-year-old boy was identified as Atharva Gopal Tayde, who had previously asked his mother to buy him a phone and was persistent in his request. However, she turned down his request. Atharva was a native of Jalgaon Jamod in Buldhana district. He was currently living in Swatik City, Sajapur Shivar, Waluj, and was an aspirant for the police recruitment exam, officials said. As the boy asked his mother to buy the phone on Sunday, only to be refused by her, he reportedly went to Khawda hill in Tisgaon and jumped off. He was rushed to the hospital by the local residents; however, the doctors declared him dead after arrival. A similar incident was reported in Maharashtra last year when a 15-year-old boy died by suicide after his mother allegedly refused to get him a mobile phone on his birthday. Officials said the boy, Vishwajeet Ramesh Chamdanwale, died at home while his mother and sister were asleep. In another case from July last year, an 18-year-old boy in Navi Mumbai died by suicide after his father didn't buy him an expensive iPhone. The boy had asked for a phone worth around Rs 1.5 lakh, but his father got him a more affordable Vivo phone instead. view comments First Published: Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.