Uddhav Thackeray Backs Maharashtra's Anti-Conversion Bill, Owaisi Slams It

Shiv Sena (UBT) chief Uddhav Thackeray has declared his party's support for the Maharashtra Freedom of Religion Bill, 2026, which seeks to prevent unlawful religious conversions through force or fraud. Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis clarified the bill targets coercive conversions, not voluntary changes of faith. However, AIMIM leader Asaduddin Owaisi strongly criticized the legislation, calling it a severe violation of privacy that criminalizes even genuine conversions. The bill includes provisions for imprisonment and aims to nullify conversions obtained through deceit or inducement.

Key Points: Maharashtra Anti-Conversion Bill: Thackeray Supports, Owaisi Criticizes

  • Bill aims to curb forced religious conversions
  • Provides for imprisonment for violations
  • CM says it targets fraud, not voluntary change
  • Owaisi criticizes it as worse than UP's law
3 min read

"We support the bill": Shiv Sena (UBT) chief Uddhav Thackeray on Freedom of Religion Bill

Shiv Sena (UBT) supports Maharashtra's Freedom of Religion Bill to curb forced conversions, while AIMIM's Owaisi calls it a privacy violation.

"We support the bill. - Uddhav Thackeray"

Mumbai, March 17

Shiv Sena chief Uddhav Thackeray has extended his party's support to the recently passed bill in the Maharashtra legislative assembly - Dharma Swatantrya Adhiniyam 2026 or the Maharashtra Freedom of Religion Bill, which aims to curb unlawful religious conversions in the state.

Addressing reporters here on Monday, Thackeray emphasized that while freedom of religion is a constitutional right, his party stands firmly against the use of force, exploitation, or fraudulent luring to change a person's faith. "I saw the bill that came forward regarding conversion... If someone uses threats to force conversion, action should be taken against them...We support the bill."

This comes after the Maharashtra government introduced the draft of the Freedom of Religion Bill, 2026, in the Maharashtra assembly earlier, with a provision of imprisonment.

While introducing the draft bill in the legislative assembly, Maharashtra Minister of State (MoS) for Home Pankaj Bhoyar said, "In recent years, there have been instances of forced religious conversions from one faith to another. These incidents disrupt public order and damage social harmony. I introduce Legislative Assembly Bill No. 20 of 2026, the Maharashtra Freedom of Religion Bill, 2026."

Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis clarified that this bill does not prohibit a person from converting, but prevents conversions done through force and fraud.

"Maharashtra Freedom of Religion Bill 2026 is not to stop someone from conversion, but it's to prevent people from conversion due to deceit, force, fraud, etc. Any conversion done through these means will be held null and void by the court on the basis of this law," he said in the Assembly.

The Maharashtra Freedom of Religion Bill aims to prevent religious conversions carried out through force, fraud, coercion, allurement, or marriage and to stop religious conversions obtained by misrepresentation, undue influence, or inducement.

Meanwhile, All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (AIMIM) chief Asaduddin Owaisi strongly criticised the bill, calling it "worse than the worst of such laws", and a brazen violation of the right to privacy.

In a post on X, he said the Maharashtra anti-conversion bill was worse than the worst of such laws, as it criminalises even genuine conversions, making it risky for interfaith couples to marry. By labelling the anti-conversion bill as "worse than the worst of such laws", the AIMIM chief implied that it was even more strict than the anti-conversion laws that already exist.

"The Maharashtra anti-conversion bill is worse than the worst of such laws, such as the one in UP. These laws already criminalise even genuine conversions, make it risky for interfaith couples to marry, and require prior permission for conversion. But the Maharashtra law now penalises anyone even endorsing conversion documents and prohibits conversion by 'brainwashing through education'. These broad terms can be used to arrest people arbitrarily, which is the purpose of this Bill," Owaisi said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone who values individual liberty, I'm concerned. The line between preventing force and policing personal choice is very thin. Terms like 'brainwashing through education' are dangerously vague and open to misuse.
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Priyanka N
Good move. No one should be tricked or pressured into changing their religion. It's about consent. If your faith is strong, you don't need to lure others with money or threats. Jai Maharashtra!
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Aman W
Owaisi has a point about interfaith couples. The law should protect against coercion, but it must not become a tool to harass couples who marry out of genuine love and mutual respect. Implementation is key.
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Karthik V
Support from Uddhav ji is significant. This isn't a partisan issue; it's about basic human dignity. Forced conversion is a crime against a person's soul. The bill seems balanced on paper. Hope it works on ground.
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Michael C
Reading the details, the scope is very broad. Penalizing someone for just "endorsing conversion documents"? That could criminalize lawyers or community leaders helping with a purely administrative process. Needs clearer safeguards.

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