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Conversion Allegations: Women’s Safety and Due Process

8 min read
An adult woman stands between a private consultation room and a courthouse corridor, with a support professional and legal official nearby.

Two reports about very different events reveal the same public-policy difficulty: how should authorities respond when allegations about relationships, sexual exploitation or religious conversion are expressed through politically charged labels?

The useful answer is neither automatic dismissal nor automatic belief in a larger conspiracy. It is a disciplined process that protects potential victims, preserves adult autonomy and tests each level of a claim against the evidence required to establish it.

Two reports, three different levels of claim

The Ichalkaranji article concerns a collective protest by Hindu Janajagruti Samiti and other Hindu organisations. Participants reportedly sought state action on what they described as "love jihad" and presented proposed Maharashtra legislation as a means of protecting women from deceptive relationships, coercion and forced conversion. The available account supports the existence and broad purpose of the protest, but it does not supply its date, exact venue, attendance, full roster of participants, police response or the recipient of any memorandum. Nor does a demonstration establish how prevalent the alleged conduct is or whether a particular law would prevent it.

The Karnataka article, by contrast, examines allegations about a named trainer at a fitness club in Saraswati Nagar, Davanagere. It says Public TV and News18 Kannada reported claims by Hindu organisation leaders that trainer Ismail cultivated relationships with Hindu women and allegedly exploited, recorded or blackmailed them. The article stresses that the reviewed coverage did not include a publicly identified complainant, an official police account or a judicial finding. As of 13 July 2026, it also reported no FIR number, complaint copy, arrest record, forensic examination, unedited CCTV export or response from the accused.

Read together, the reports disclose three questions that public discussion can easily collapse into one. Did an individual commit an offence against a woman? Was any woman selected because of her religion or pressured to convert? Was the conduct part of an organised programme? Evidence proving the first proposition would not automatically prove either of the others. The Ichalkaranji protest advances a broad legislative concern, while the Davanagere coverage presents preliminary allegations about an individual; neither report, on its own, supplies proof of an organised conversion network.

Key takeaways

  • Expressions such as "love jihad" and "gym jihad" describe an activist interpretation of events, not a criminal finding or a substitute for statutory offences.
  • Individual misconduct, religion-based targeting and participation in an organised network are separate claims requiring separate proof.
  • Women’s safety requires confidential reporting and investigation of coercion, while adult women retain authority over lawful relationships, friendships and religious choices.
  • A proposed conversion law should be judged by the enforcement gap it closes, the precision of its definitions and its safeguards against misuse.

Evidence must follow the alleged conduct

Three separated evidence areas contain a sealed pouch, a blank-screen phone, and a chair for a confidential interview.

Both articles cite the Union Ministry of Home Affairs’ 4 February 2020 parliamentary reply stating that "love jihad" was not defined under the laws then in force. The derivative expression "gym jihad" is likewise not the name of an offence under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita. That classification point does not make independently provable conduct such as fraud, intimidation, stalking, sexual violence, abduction, blackmail or forced conversion lawful. It means investigators must identify the alleged act and apply the corresponding legal ingredients instead of attempting to prove a slogan.

The Davanagere report illustrates the difference. Described CCTV footage allegedly shows the trainer conversing with and spending time around several women. If authentic, such images may help establish presence, timing and the duration of interactions. They cannot by themselves demonstrate sexual exploitation, covert recording, blackmail, psychological coercion, conversion pressure or religiously selective targeting. A credible grooming inquiry would look for an evidenced progression from professional contact to boundary violations, demands for secrecy, isolation, acquisition of intimate material, threats or other forms of control.

Original evidence matters more than viral extracts. The Karnataka article explains that investigators would need the source DVR or NVR data, camera map, system-clock information, retention settings, access logs and a documented chain of custody. A forensic copy and cryptographic hash can help demonstrate that material was preserved without alteration. Sections 61 and 63 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023, as discussed in that article, address electronic records and certification. Messages, account data, booking records, lawful call records, transactions and witness accounts may then corroborate or contradict what a selected video clip appears to show.

This evidentiary discipline protects every participant. It gives complainants a path from allegation to provable conduct, reduces the risk that edited material will distort their experiences and allows an accused person a meaningful opportunity to answer authenticated evidence. It also prevents an unproved network theory from overshadowing a potentially provable offence against an individual woman.

Women’s safety includes autonomy and confidential access

An adult woman speaks privately with a female counselor in a secure consultation room with a closed frosted-glass door.

A fitness setting can create a real professional power imbalance. Personal training may involve repeated one-to-one contact, physical proximity and reliance on a trainer’s expertise. Clear boundaries, secure changing spaces, controlled access to surveillance systems and confidential complaint channels therefore matter regardless of the religions of the trainer and client. If compromising recordings or threats are alleged, privacy-preserving evidence collection is particularly important because uncontrolled publicity can inflict a second injury.

The Karnataka article recommends that affected women be able to approach police without first appearing before activists, gym personnel or news media. It notes that Section 173 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023, permits information about a cognisable offence to be provided irrespective of where it occurred and requires information concerning specified offences against women to be recorded by a woman police officer or woman officer. Separate initial interviews and individual timelines can help investigators identify independently recurring facts without encouraging witnesses to absorb one another’s accounts.

Protection must not become control. The Ichalkaranji article distinguishes a consensual adult relationship, a voluntary change of faith and a relationship involving criminal coercion or deception. Interfaith contact does not establish exploitation, and conversion after a relationship does not by itself establish force. At the same time, assertions of consent cannot excuse threats, impersonation, blackmail, confinement or sexual abuse. Women may require protection from an abusive partner, but they may also require protection from surveillance, forced separation or family and community pressure imposed in the name of safeguarding them.

Cases involving minors belong in a distinct legal category. As the Ichalkaranji article notes, the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012, defines a child as a person below eighteen and provides special protections that are not displaced by apparent agreement. Age verification, immediate safety, confidentiality and child-sensitive procedures should therefore take precedence over communal characterisations.

From prosecution to legislation, locate the actual gap

The call for a special Maharashtra law should begin with a clear account of what existing law does and does not reach. According to the Ichalkaranji article, the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, which came into force on 1 July 2024, already contains offences addressing conduct such as rape, stalking, kidnapping, abduction, cheating and criminal intimidation. Its Section 69 addresses sexual intercourse obtained through specified deceitful means or a promise to marry made without an intention to fulfil it when the conduct does not amount to rape; the explanation discussed in the article includes marrying after suppressing identity.

The remaining legislative question is consequently narrower than a general demand to protect women. Policymakers must determine whether unlawful conversion presents an enforcement gap not adequately covered by existing offences and, if so, whether a new statute defines force, fraud and prohibited inducement precisely enough to distinguish them from persuasion, belief and adult choice. Useful scrutiny would also examine who may initiate proceedings, what evidence triggers coercive powers, how privacy is protected and how false or proxy complaints are filtered without deterring genuine victims.

Constitutional boundaries remain relevant. The Ichalkaranji article points to the Special Marriage Act, 1954, as a lawful civil route for eligible adults who do not adopt the same religion. It also discusses Shafin Jahan v. Asokan K.M., in which the Supreme Court restored an adult woman’s marriage while allowing investigation of independently alleged criminality to continue, and Rev. Stainislaus v. State of Madhya Pradesh, which upheld prohibitions on conversion through force, fraud or allurement. Together, those principles distinguish an individual’s freedom to choose a partner or faith from another person’s claimed right to override that choice.

Public demands should also distinguish enactment from implementation. A proposed measure cannot operate as law until it passes the required legislative stages, receives the constitutionally required assent, is published and commences according to its terms. Debate is most productive when it identifies the responsible institution, the alleged enforcement failure and the safeguard proposed for each risk.

The way forward is a conduct-first system: safe access for complainants, rapid preservation of evidence, impartial investigation, protection of privacy, an opportunity for the accused to respond and legislative review grounded in demonstrated gaps. Such a system can take conversion allegations seriously without allowing religious identity or public outrage to decide the facts in advance.

References

FAQs

What does a conduct-first response to conversion allegations involve?

It begins by identifying the specific alleged act, preserving original evidence and investigating the legal elements of that conduct. It also protects complainants’ privacy, allows the accused to answer authenticated evidence and keeps broader network claims separate unless they are independently proved.

Are “love jihad” and “gym jihad” criminal offences in themselves?

No; the article describes these expressions as activist labels rather than criminal findings or statutory offences. Investigators should examine independently provable conduct such as fraud, intimidation, stalking, sexual violence, abduction, blackmail or forced conversion.

What can CCTV footage prove in an alleged exploitation case?

If authentic, CCTV may help establish presence, timing and the duration of interactions. It cannot by itself prove exploitation, covert recording, blackmail, coercion, conversion pressure or religious targeting, so investigators need original system data, chain of custody and corroborating evidence.

How can authorities protect women without overriding adult autonomy?

Authorities should provide confidential access to police, privacy-preserving evidence collection and impartial investigation of threats, deception or abuse. They should also respect an adult woman’s lawful choices about relationships and religion and avoid treating interfaith contact or conversion alone as proof of coercion.

What evidence is needed to show religious targeting or an organised conversion network?

Individual misconduct, religion-based selection and participation in an organised programme are separate claims that require separate proof. Evidence of an offence against one woman does not automatically establish religious targeting or a wider conversion network.

How should a proposed conversion law be evaluated?

Policymakers should first identify an enforcement gap that existing offences do not address and define force, fraud and prohibited inducement precisely. A new law should also specify who may initiate proceedings, set evidence thresholds, protect privacy and filter false or proxy complaints without deterring genuine victims.

Why are allegations involving minors treated differently?

The article treats cases involving anyone below eighteen as a distinct legal category under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012. Age verification, immediate safety, confidentiality and child-sensitive procedures take priority, and apparent agreement does not displace those protections.

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