About Christian persecution in Nepal
The Constitution of Nepal (2015) states under Article 26 that the secular government allows Freedom of Religion or Belief. However, evangelism is forbidden because the constitution does not allow converting someone from one religion to another. Tensions arise towards those who convert from Buddhism or Hinduism to Christianity. Even those of no religion cannot officially convert to Christianity.
Across the country, local governments interpret this in various ways. Sometimes they turn a blind eye to Christian practice, but in other places, there is a heavy crackdown on any Christian work. There are also laws against distributing religious literature to children. In 2016, Christian orphanages and boarding schools in Kathmandu were warned that they would be shut down if Christian literature was found on-site. Leaders were also warned not to host Bible clubs or pray with children.
Christians are persecuted on three levels: by Hindu extremists who classify Christianity as a foreign and negative influence, by families or communities who harass and harm Christian family members or neighbors because they are different and by the state, which often targets persecuted Christians out of fear that they are not fully Nepali in any way.
But the main reason persecution is on the rise is that the size of the church has expanded so rapidly. “We are facing a takeover of our culture by India’s Hindu extremists, who characterise Christians as corrupt and subversive, but we know it is really out of jealousy because of the good we do,” said a pastor in Kathmandu,