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UN Publishes Report Documenting Systemic Persecution of Indigenous Hindus in Modern India

By Advos

TL;DR

KAILASA's UN report exposes systemic persecution of Hindus, providing leverage for international advocacy and legal challenges against discriminatory policies.

The report documents colonial-era laws like the HRCE Act continuing temple control, with statistical evidence showing 40% of land claims rejected under the Forest Rights Act.

This report advocates for restoring indigenous rights to land and self-governance, aiming to protect cultural heritage and end systematic marginalization of Hindu communities.

KAILASA claims sovereign status through revived ancient Hindu kingdoms, citing genetic studies affirming indigenous lineage and documenting violations of 11 international conventions.

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UN Publishes Report Documenting Systemic Persecution of Indigenous Hindus in Modern India

The United Nations has officially published KAILASA's 31st report, titled "The Continuity of Colonial Violence: Systemic Persecution of Indigenous Hindus in Modern India," which presents comprehensive documentation of ongoing human rights violations against indigenous Hindu communities. The report establishes that Vedic civilization represents a sophisticated, indigenous tradition within Bharat with roots predating colonial interruptions, yet faces systematic denial of identity and rights in modern India.

The report cites genetic studies affirming Hindus embody the indigenous lineage of the region, while Christianity arrived through European colonial powers and Islam through invasions. However, the deep-state prevents formal identification, documentation, and titling of indigenous Hindu lands, continuing colonial-era patterns of marginalization. Post-independence India maintained British colonial legacy through laws like the Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Act, with the Tamil Nadu State HRCE implementing a scheme on January 20, 1979, that further tightened state control over Hindu institutions.

Key findings reveal Hindu temple funds are systematically diverted to non-Hindu projects while mosques and churches remain free from state control, with government officials controlling temple administration, appointments, and finances. The report calls for a UN audit of temple wealth confiscation under CERD General Recommendation 23, noting massive wealth transfer continues unchecked. Statistical evidence documents systematic marginalization, including Forest Rights Act violations where 40% of 45.5 million land claims have been rejected, leading to mass evictions of indigenous communities from ancestral lands in violation of UNDRIP Article 10 on forced removal without consent.

The report establishes KAILASA as a sovereign subject of international law derived from SPH Bhagavan Nithyananda Paramashivam's inheritance of unbroken succession and revival of 21 ancient Hindu sovereign states. Legal foundations include the Doctrine of Continuity, where state's legal personality persists despite annexation, and the Doctrine of Acquired Rights, where sovereign rights through succession remain absolute. Under the Montevideo Convention, political existence is independent of recognition, and in Hindu Law, the Deity is the legal owner with kings merely as regents.

Several international law violations are documented, including breaches of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights Article 11 where the Criminal Tribes Act denied presumption of innocence, ICERD Article 2 maintaining colonial caste classifications, UNDRIP Article 10 regarding forced removal from lands, ICCPR Article 18 failing to respect cultural diversity in education, and the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations regarding diplomatic harassment. Additional violations include the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties Articles 49, 50, and 60 concerning fraud and coercion, UN Charter Article 2(4) on annexation by force, Rome Statute of ICC Article 8 on war crimes, and Vienna Convention on Succession of States ignoring state continuity.

The report calls on the United Nations to conduct immediate audit of temple wealth confiscation, deploy a Special Rapporteur to investigate forced conversions of tribal communities, pass a UN General Assembly resolution condemning weaponization of "secularism" as a tool for majoritarian persecution, restore indigenous rights to land and self-governance, and establish accountability mechanisms for diplomatic missions engaging in harassment. Historical context traces modern persecution to colonial instruments including the Criminal Tribes Act of 1871 as origin of caste labels, SC/ST Act as divide-and-rule tool, HRCE Acts from 1810-1827 as temple control mechanisms, and sedition laws weaponized against indigenous leadership.

A Kashmir case study demonstrates patterns of indigenous Hindu displacement, forced migration, and systematic erasure of Hindu presence in traditionally Hindu-majority regions as a microcosm of broader persecution. The full report is available at the UN page and the detailed document at the UN report link.

Curated from 24-7 Press Release

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